A survey of physician attitudes and practices concerning cost-effectiveness in patient care

Citation
Me. Ginsburg et al., A survey of physician attitudes and practices concerning cost-effectiveness in patient care, WEST J MED, 173(6), 2000, pp. 390-394
Citations number
15
Categorie Soggetti
General & Internal Medicine
Journal title
WESTERN JOURNAL OF MEDICINE
ISSN journal
00930415 → ACNP
Volume
173
Issue
6
Year of publication
2000
Pages
390 - 394
Database
ISI
SICI code
0093-0415(200012)173:6<390:ASOPAA>2.0.ZU;2-0
Abstract
Objective To identify physicians' views regarding cost-containment and cost -effectiveness and their attitudes and experience using cost-effectiveness in clinical decision making. Design A dose-ended 30-item written survey. 8 Subjects 1,000 randomly selected physicians whose practices currently encom pass direct patient care and who work in the California counties of Sacrame nto, Yolo, Placer, Nevada, and El Dorado. 8 Outcome measures Physician atti tudes about the role of cost and cost-effectiveness in treatment decisions, perceived barriers to cost-effective medical practice, and response of phy sicians and patients if there are conflicts about treatment that physicians consider either not indicated or not cost-effective. 8 Results Most physic ians regard cost-effectiveness as an appropriate component of clinical deci sions and think that only the treating physician and patient should decide what is cost-worthy. However, physicians are divided on whether they have a duty to offer medical interventions with remote chances of benefit regardl ess of cost, and they vary considerably in their interactions with patients when cost-effectiveness is an issue. 8 Conclusion Although physicians in t he Sacramento region accept cost-effectiveness as important and appropriate in clinical practice, there is little uniformity in how cost-effectiveness decisions are implemented.