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Patients Becoming more Empowered, New Study Finds
There has been a fundamental shift in the patient-physician relationship
away from an authoritarian and paternalistic model and toward
partnership and team based approaches, according to a new international
study of patients' and physicians' perceptions.
Patients are significantly more confident and empowered than
they were ten years ago. They possess high confidence in physicians
but also demonstrate higher expectations for ideal physician performance
and higher expectations for improvement. Physician confidence
in patient self-management is more modest.
The results of the study were announced today (Thursday) by
Dr Mike Magee, Senior Fellow in the Humanities to the World Medical
Association and Director of the Pfizer Medical Humanities Initiative,
addressing the WMA's annual General Assembly meeting in Helsinki.
The study is based on 3,707 interviews last year with general
practitioners and patients in six countries in four continents
- the United States, United Kingdom, Canada, Germany, South Africa
and Japan. The study captured patient and physician opinions of
physician performence in five dimensions of humanistic care and
five dimensions of accessibility to care.
Among the findings are:
- The patient-physician relationship ranks second in importance
to family relationships in all countries studied;
- Physicians are the leading source of health information, the
most trusted source, and the source most likely to instigate
positive behavioral change in patients in all countries studied;
- All countries agree that authoritarian paternalistic relationships
between physicians and patients are relatively uncommon today.
These relationships are being replaced by mutual partnerships
or advisor models;
- Patients and physicians in all countries foresee future movement
toward partnership and team based models;
- Compared to 10 years ago, most patients in all countries believe
they ask more questions, make more choices, actively evaluate
benefit and risk, and take better care of their own health;
- Patients' confidence in managing their own health is very
high in all countries except Japan. Physician confidence in
patients' self-management is lower than patients scoring in
five of the six countries;
- In general, patients rate issues such as compassion, trust,
understanding, patience and listening higher than access to
physicians;
- Physicians in all countries rate their performance on issues
such as trust higher than do patients. In contrast, physicians
in the United Kingdom and Germany rate their ideal access performance
lower than the patients' expectation for ideal access performance;
Commenting on the findings, Dr Magee said:
"The patient-physician relationship is part of the critical
underpinning of stable societies. In addition to diagnosis, treatment
and prevention, the relationship reinforces family linkages, processes
citizens' daily fears and worries, and helps reinforce long term
confidence and associated willingness to invest in the future.
As such, health care system investment delivers an enormous value
beyond nuts and bolts healthcare.
Physicians' ability to measure up to patient expectations for
humanistic and accessible care will largely define the physician's
future effectiveness as a health care leader and will determine
how the patient-physician relationship will influence the well
being of the individual, family, community and society in the
future."
A copy of the report
and tables is attached.
Note to editors:
Patients and physicians were simultaneously studied in six countries
using nationally representative telephone surveys between July
22, 2002 and October 13, 2002. 2506 interviews were conducted
on patients (63% response rate) and 1201 interviews were conducted
on physicians (58% response rate) using a random digit dialing
(RDD) methodology.
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