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      Reorganisation of general practice: be careful what you wish for

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          Patients' perceptions of medical explanations for somatisation disorders: qualitative analysis.

          To describe, from the perspective of patients, distinguishing features of doctors' attempts to explain the symptoms of somatisation disorders. Qualitative analysis of verbatim records of interviews in which patients recounted doctors' explanations of their symptoms. Patients with persistent somatising symptoms referred from general practices in Liverpool and St Helens and Knowsley were interviewed before entry into a treatment programme. 228 of 324 patients referred were interviewed. Initial interviews were used to develop the process and technique, and the final analysis was based on a subsample of 68 records, randomly chosen from the transcripts of 188 subjects who were interviewed subsequently. Doctors' explanations were often at odds with the patients' own thinking. Analysis showed that medical explanations could be grouped into one of three categories, defined by the patients' perceptions. Most explanations were experienced as rejecting the reality of the symptoms. An intermediate category comprised explanations that were viewed as colluding, in which the doctor acquiesced with the patients' own biomedical theories. However, a few explanations were perceived by patients as tangible, exculpating, and involving. These explanations were experienced by patients as satisfying and empowering. Patients with somatisation disorders feel satisfied and empowered by medical explanations that are tangible, exculpating, and involving. Empowering explanations could improve these patients' wellbeing and help to reduce the high demands they make on health services.
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            Divided we fail

            Iona Heath (2011)
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              Author and article information

              Contributors
              Role: GP
              Role: Researcher
              Role: GP and Clinical Research Fellow
              Role: Professor of Primary Care
              Role: GP and Associate Professor
              Role: National Medical Director’s Clinical Fellow at the CQC (Primary Care)
              Role: Professor in Primary Health Care
              Journal
              Br J Gen Pract
              Br J Gen Pract
              bjgp
              The British Journal of General Practice
              Royal College of General Practitioners
              0960-1643
              1478-5242
              October 2019
              28 August 2019
              : 69
              : 687
              : 517-518
              Affiliations
              Associate Professor in Primary Care, and Director of Medical Education (Primary Care and Community), UCL Medical School, London.
              UCL Medical School, London.
              Nuffield Department of Primary Care Health Sciences, University of Oxford, Oxford.
              Centre for Academic Primary Care, University of Bristol, Bristol.
              Nuffield Department of Primary Care Health Sciences, University of Oxford, Oxford.
              UCL Medical School, London.
              Centre for Academic Primary Care, University of Bristol, Bristol.
              Author notes
              ADDRESS FOR CORRESPONDENCE Sophie Park University College London Medical School, Research Department of Primary Care and Population Health, Royal Free Campus, Rowland Hill St, Hampstead, London NW3 2PY, UK. Email: sophie.park@ 123456ucl.ac.uk
              Article
              PMC6774680 PMC6774680 6774680
              10.3399/bjgp19X705941
              6774680
              31558540
              5700450f-fae0-4016-a26e-56bd5457adba
              © British Journal of General Practice 2019
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