2017
DOI: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2017.01.025
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Wasting the doctor's time? A video-elicitation interview study with patients in primary care

Abstract: Reaching a decision about whether and when to visit the doctor can be a difficult process for the patient. An early visit may cause the doctor to wonder why the patient chose to consult when the disease was self-limiting and symptoms would have settled without medical input. A late visit may cause the doctor to express dismay that the patient waited so long before consulting. In the UK primary care context of constrained resources and government calls for cautious healthcare spending, there is all the more pre… Show more

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Cited by 57 publications
(62 citation statements)
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“…Moving beyond social interaction to wider cultural influences, we identified a concern among COPD participants about being labelled a “time‐waster” and valued cultural attributes of stoicism. Worry about wasting the doctor's time is a well‐recognised barrier to prompt help seeking and demonstrates the complex and delicate moral balance patients have to make between responsible use of health care services and not taking unnecessary risks with their health.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Moving beyond social interaction to wider cultural influences, we identified a concern among COPD participants about being labelled a “time‐waster” and valued cultural attributes of stoicism. Worry about wasting the doctor's time is a well‐recognised barrier to prompt help seeking and demonstrates the complex and delicate moral balance patients have to make between responsible use of health care services and not taking unnecessary risks with their health.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Second, it is unknown what would encourage this group of patients to visit the GP before their behaviour could be influenced by their cancer disease. The reasons for non‐attenders to contact a GP is multifaceted and should be interpreted in the context of discourses on access to GPs, “acceptable” reasons for contacting, and how to be a “good patient” who does not waste the GP's time (Llanwarne, Newbould, Burt, Campbell, & Roland, ; Offersen, Vedsted, & Andersen, ). However, as the GPs have a pivotal position of connecting patients and health care, a proactive approach by the GP may limit the non‐attenders' reasons for not seeing the GP.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Firstly, what might encourage this group to visit the doctor? Patients' concerns about ‘wasting the doctor's time’ are paramount and compounded by the health care system in the UK at least . Communication to such patients encouraging them to consult may be interpreted in the context of public discourses about GPs’ time being in short supply.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Patients' concerns about 'wasting the doctor's time' are paramount and compounded by the health care system in the UK at least. 5 Communication to such patients encouraging them to consult may be interpreted in the context of public discourses about GPs' time being in short supply. Individuals that never consult may be particularly sensitive to concerns about the legitimacy of seeing the doctor especially with minor symptoms.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%