Does a higher frequency of difficult patient encounters lead to lower quality care? This study would suggest it does not. Despite physician burnout, dissatisfaction, and related stresses associated with challenging practices, investigators found that quality of care was unaffected.

2013 
Background c Difficult patient encounters in the primary care office are frequent and are associated with physician burnout. however, their relationship to patient care outcomes is not known. Objective c To determine the effect of difficult encounters on patient health outcomes and the role of physician dissatisfaction and burnout as mediators of this effect. Design c a total of 422 physicians were sorted into 3 clusters based on perceived frequency of difficult patient encounters in their practices. Patient charts were audited to assess the quality of hypertension and diabetes management and preventive care based on national guidelines. Summary measures of quality and errors were compared among the 3 physician clusters. Results c of the 1384 patients, 359 were cared for by high-cluster physicians (those who had a high frequency of difficult encounters), 871 by medium-cluster physicians, and 154 by low-cluster physicians. Dissatisfaction and burnout were higher among physicians reporting higher frequencies of difficult encounters. however, quality of patient care and management errors were similar across all
    • Correction
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    23
    References
    0
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []