2012
DOI: 10.1016/j.amepre.2011.10.008
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Prioritization of Evidence-Based Preventive Health Services During Periodic Health Examinations

Abstract: Background Delivery of preventive services sometimes falls short of guideline recommendations. Purpose To evaluate the multilevel factors associated with evidence-based preventive service delivery during periodic health examinations (PHE). Methods Primary care physicians were recruited from an integrated delivery system in southeast Michigan. Office visit audio-recordings of PHE visits conducted from 2007–2009 were used to ascertain physician recommendation for or delivery of 19 guideline-recommended preve… Show more

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Cited by 54 publications
(44 citation statements)
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References 53 publications
(46 reference statements)
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“…Indeed, empirical evidence suggests clinicians counsel more about preventive care than about health behaviors. 42 Furthermore, while the health behaviors we studied can be favorably influenced by access to health care, in general they seem to be less influenced by health care access than preventive care and relatively more influenced by other barriers, such as the requirement of sustained patient motivation and effort. Research indicates that most people who quit smoking do so without help from a health care provider 43 ; that provider counseling regarding use of seatbelts has uncertain influence on actual use 44 ; and that routinely employed approaches to encouraging weight loss in the clinical setting are largely ineffective.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Indeed, empirical evidence suggests clinicians counsel more about preventive care than about health behaviors. 42 Furthermore, while the health behaviors we studied can be favorably influenced by access to health care, in general they seem to be less influenced by health care access than preventive care and relatively more influenced by other barriers, such as the requirement of sustained patient motivation and effort. Research indicates that most people who quit smoking do so without help from a health care provider 43 ; that provider counseling regarding use of seatbelts has uncertain influence on actual use 44 ; and that routinely employed approaches to encouraging weight loss in the clinical setting are largely ineffective.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, when confronted with multiple competing evidence-based interventions during busy patient visits, primary care physicians tend to neglect influenza vaccinations. 8 This omission likely reflects patient and clinician priorities that compete for time for discussion and decisionmaking.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The successful provision of preventive screenings and education during a primary care office visit is complex and includes patient, physician, relationship and visit contextual factors, such as the number of problems brought to the fore by the patient at that encounter. 38 As seen above, TBSE at a routine office visit likely adds 70 or more seconds, 32 and the education associated with it perhaps another minute. The challenge for the primary care clinician, given the constraints of limited office visit time and resources, is to effectively and individually prioritize interventions and screenings that would most improve the future health of a particular patient at that time.…”
Section: Synthesismentioning
confidence: 99%