J Korean Acad Fam Med.  2006 Feb;27(2):91-96.

Difficult Problems for Family Physicians in Clinical Practice

Affiliations
  • 1Department of Family Medicine, Dongguk University College of Medicine, Gyeongju, Korea. snj@dongguk.ac.kr

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Real performance in practice is one of the criteria by which residency training program can be evaluated. We surveyed the difficult problems in which family physicians underwent in their practices after a university hospital training program to evaluate our family physician training program.
METHODS
The study subjects were all physicians who fulfilled our family physician residency training program in a university hospital from February 1993 to February 1999. Data on facing difficult problems were collected via questionnaire which was distributed in advance and answered by practicing physicians. The study period was the first week of each month from March 1999 to December 1999.
RESULTS
The participating physicians were 13 among 20. Total collected cases were 179. The reasons why family physicians faced difficulty in their practices were persistent symptoms of patients, lack of knowledge, lack of skills and facilities, vague symptoms, multiple symptoms of patients, low compliance, negative feelings, and patients' economic problems. Common difficult problems were abdominal pain (15), low back pain (14), cough (14), arthralgia and myalgia (12), skin rash (11), dyspnea (8), multiple somatic complaints (8), otitis media (7), nasal stuffiness (6), and dizziness (6) among 179 cases. Rare diseases comprised 22.2% of difficult problems.
CONCLUSION
The problems of difficulty that family physicians faced in their practices were persistent symptoms of chronic diseases despite active treatment, lack of knowledge and skills in differential diagnosis of acute illness, and rare diseases in the communities.

Keyword

family physician; residency; training; difficult problems

MeSH Terms

Abdominal Pain
Arthralgia
Chronic Disease
Compliance
Cough
Diagnosis, Differential
Dizziness
Dyspnea
Education
Exanthema
Humans
Internship and Residency
Low Back Pain
Myalgia
Otitis Media
Physicians, Family*
Rare Diseases
Surveys and Questionnaires
Full Text Links
  • KJFM
Actions
Cited
CITED
export Copy
Close
Share
  • Twitter
  • Facebook
Similar articles
Copyright © 2024 by Korean Association of Medical Journal Editors. All rights reserved.     E-mail: koreamed@kamje.or.kr