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Journal Article

Citation

Bross MH, Hartwig LC, Herring J. J. Health Soc. Policy 1993; 5(1): 59-69.

Affiliation

University of Mississippi Medical Center, Jackson 39216.

Copyright

(Copyright © 1993, Informa - Taylor and Francis Group)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

10128264

Abstract

Family and general practice physicians deliver comprehensive health care over time and are well suited to promote health and prevent disease. Prior studies of preventive medicine routines have tended to address a limited number of the recommended practices. The purpose of this study was to: (1) estimate the level of primary care physician compliance with the wide range of physician recommendations in Healthy People 2000: National Health Promotion and Disease Prevention Objectives for the Year 2000 and (2) identify practice characteristics associated with performance of preventive health care. Full-time family and general practice physicians, located in rural Mississippi towns of 5,000 to 10,000, were selected for the study. Of 94 eligible physicians, 81 were surveyed (73 surveys completed on site and 8 surveys returned by mail). The physicians treated a mean of 35 patients per day, with a disproportionate number of elderly patients. Limited physician time was ranked by physicians as the greatest obstacle to preventive medicine. Physicians were found to practice more preventive medicine in the adult and elderly patients than in the children and adolescents. Cancer, cardiovascular, and infectious disease risks were well addressed, with little attention directed toward occupational and environmental (e.g., lead, firearm, automobile) risks. Two practice characteristics were consistently associated with higher preventive medicine scores: an assigned preventive medicine staff member and preventive medicine flow charts. This information, obtained in a medically underserved area, may be used to assist physicians in meeting the Healthy People 2000 objectives. More research is needed to identify effective approaches for health risks that were not well addressed in physician offices.

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