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Original Articles

Strategies for achieving efficiency in the general practitioner’s everyday life

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Pages 261-270 | Received 19 Jul 2021, Accepted 22 May 2022, Published online: 19 Jul 2022
 

Abstract

Objective

To describe concrete, effective strategies used by experienced GPs to achieve time efficiency, increase patient satisfaction and maintain high medical quality during patient meetings.

Design

Qualitative observation yielded field notes for qualitative content analysis according to Graneheim and Lundman. Follow-up telephone interviews were conducted to get feedback from patients.

Setting

A normal working day with patient meetings in a primary health care center in Sweden.

Subjects

Five GPs known for being experienced and well-functioning clinicians were strategically chosen to participate in an observational study during patient meetings. Afterwards a random selection of 25 patients (five from each GP) were asked to rate their experience of their meeting.

Results

Observation and analysis of GPs’ work before, during, and after patient meetings revealed several concrete strategies, which we classified into two main categories: Behavioral and Communicative, comprising nine and seven subcategories, respectively.

Conclusion

Most important behavioral skills for time efficiency were a GP’s ability to handle interruptions, and effective administration. Medical quality during patient meetings was most supported by GP continuity and relationship, an exploratory patient-centered approach, a focus on one task at a time, and the ability to acknowledge and learn from medical uncertainty. Patients were most satisfied with GPs who had good communicative skills, good GP continuity and relationship.

    Key points

  • The changing field of general medicine requires general practitioners (GPs), to work efficiently, but studies on effective work strategies for GPs are scarce.

  • GPs used several concrete strategies falling into two broad categories (behavioral and communicative) that may also be important for other practitioners wishing to improve their methods in clinical patient work.

  • The most important strategies for time efficiency were mainly behavioral; for medical quality during patient meetings, a mix of behavioral and communicative; and for patient satisfaction, communicative.

Acknowledgements

The authors thank the five GPs who allowed this study of their working behavior, their patients for their time, and the department of Research, Development, Education and Innovation, Primary Health Care, Region Västra Götaland, Sweden, for supervision and for funding of the proofreading.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.