Item does not contain fulltextBACKGROUND: Patients who visit their General Practitioner (GP) very frequently over extended periods of time often have multimorbidity and are costly in primary and specialist healthcare. We investigated the impact of patient-level psychosocial and GP-level factors on the persistence of frequent attendance (FA) in primary care. METHODS: Two-year prospective cohort study in 623 incident adult frequent attenders (>90th attendance centile; age and sex-adjusted) in 2009. Information was collected through questionnaires (patients, GPs) and GPs' patient data. We used multilevel, ordinal logistic regression analysis, controlling for somatic illness and demographic factors with FA in 2010 and/or 2011 as the outcome. RE...
Background: Anxiety, mild depression and somatization are common in primary care (PC). Several studi...
<p><b>Background:</b> Patients visiting their GPs exceptionally often (frequent attenders, FAs) have...
Objective: To investigate risk factors for frequent attendance in primary care over time, contrastin...
BACKGROUND: Patients who visit their General Practitioner (GP) very frequently over extended periods...
Persistent frequent attendance in primary care in the UK can be seen as problematic for the health s...
Frequent attenders (FAs) account for a large proportion of contacts with general practitioners (GPs)...
Objectives: Frequent attenders (FAs) suffer more and consult general practitioners (GPs) more often ...
Background. Most frequent attendance in primary care is temporary, but persistent frequent attendanc...
BACKGROUND: General Practitioners spend a disproportionate amount of time on frequent attenders. So ...
Contains fulltext : 167904.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)OBJECTIVES: Fre...
BACKGROUND: A detailed description of the characteristics of frequent attenders (FAs) at primary car...
OBJECTIVES: To describe patterns of frequent attendance in Australian primary care, and identify the...
Background:The top 3% of frequent attendance in primary care is associated with 15% of all appointme...
Introduction - The small number of the population who make disproportionally greater use of health c...
Background: Anxiety, mild depression and somatization are common in Primary Care (PC). Several studi...
Background: Anxiety, mild depression and somatization are common in primary care (PC). Several studi...
<p><b>Background:</b> Patients visiting their GPs exceptionally often (frequent attenders, FAs) have...
Objective: To investigate risk factors for frequent attendance in primary care over time, contrastin...
BACKGROUND: Patients who visit their General Practitioner (GP) very frequently over extended periods...
Persistent frequent attendance in primary care in the UK can be seen as problematic for the health s...
Frequent attenders (FAs) account for a large proportion of contacts with general practitioners (GPs)...
Objectives: Frequent attenders (FAs) suffer more and consult general practitioners (GPs) more often ...
Background. Most frequent attendance in primary care is temporary, but persistent frequent attendanc...
BACKGROUND: General Practitioners spend a disproportionate amount of time on frequent attenders. So ...
Contains fulltext : 167904.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)OBJECTIVES: Fre...
BACKGROUND: A detailed description of the characteristics of frequent attenders (FAs) at primary car...
OBJECTIVES: To describe patterns of frequent attendance in Australian primary care, and identify the...
Background:The top 3% of frequent attendance in primary care is associated with 15% of all appointme...
Introduction - The small number of the population who make disproportionally greater use of health c...
Background: Anxiety, mild depression and somatization are common in Primary Care (PC). Several studi...
Background: Anxiety, mild depression and somatization are common in primary care (PC). Several studi...
<p><b>Background:</b> Patients visiting their GPs exceptionally often (frequent attenders, FAs) have...
Objective: To investigate risk factors for frequent attendance in primary care over time, contrastin...