Elsevier

Social Science & Medicine

Volume 176, March 2017, Pages 113-122
Social Science & Medicine

Wasting the doctor's time? A video-elicitation interview study with patients in primary care

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.socscimed.2017.01.025Get rights and content
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open access

Highlights

  • The study considers patients' worry about wasting doctors' time in UK primary care.

  • Doctors and public campaigns refer to appropriate and inappropriate service users.

  • Patients adopt a dichotomised view of rational users and ‘timewasters’.

  • Beneath lies real uncertainty over what constitutes a good enough reason to consult.

  • Candidacy offers a helpful framework to negotiate eligibility for medical time.

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 pressure on both doctor and patient to meet only when necessary. A tendency on the part of health professionals to judge patients' decisions to consult as appropriate or not is already described. What is less well explored is the patient's experience of such judgment. Drawing on data from 52 video-elicitation interviews conducted in the English primary care setting, the present paper examines how patients seek to legitimise their decision to consult, and their struggles in doing so. The concern over wasting the doctor's time is expressed repeatedly through patients' narratives. Referring to the sociological literature, the history of ‘trivia’ in defining the role of general practice is discussed, and current public discourses seeking to assist the patient in developing appropriate consulting behaviour are considered and problematised. Whilst the patient is expected to have sufficient insight to inform timely consulting behaviour, it becomes clear that any attempt on the part of doctor or patient to define legitimate help-seeking is in fact elusive. Despite this, a significant moral dimension to what is deemed appropriate consulting by doctors and patients remains. The notion of candidacy is suggested as a suitable framework and way forward for encompassing these struggles to negotiate eligibility for medical time.

Keywords

United Kingdom
Patient experience
Help seeking
Primary care
Candidacy
Video elicitation interviews
Wasting time
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