Patients' Characteristics and General Practitioners' Management of Patients with Symptom Diagnoses

J Am Board Fam Med. 2023 May 8;36(3):477-492. doi: 10.3122/jabfm.2022.220335R1.

Abstract

Introduction: Symptom diagnoses are diagnoses used in primary care when the relevant diagnostic criteria of a disease are not fulfilled. Although symptom diagnoses often get resolved spontaneously without a clearly defined illness nor treatment, up to 38% of these symptoms persist more than 1 year. It is largely unknown how often symptom diagnoses occur, which symptoms persist, and how general practitioners (GPs) manage them.

Aim: Explore morbidity rates, characteristics and management of patients with nonpersistent (≤1 year) and persistent (>1 year) symptom diagnoses.

Methods: A retrospective cohort study was performed in a Dutch practice-based research network including 28,590 registered patients. We selected symptom diagnosis episodes with at least 1 contact in 2018. We performed descriptive statistics, Student's T and χ2 tests to summarize and compare patients' characteristics and GP management strategies in the nonpersistent and persistent groups.

Results: The incidence rate of symptom diagnoses was 767 episodes per 1000 patient-years. The prevalence rate was 485 patients per 1000 patient-years. Out of the patients who had a contact with their GPs, 58% had at least 1 symptom diagnosis, from which 16% were persistent (>1 year). In the persistent group, we found significantly more females (64% vs 57%), older patients (mean: 49 vs 36 years of age), patients with more comorbidities (71% vs 49%), psychological (17% vs 12%) and social (8% vs 5%) problems. Prescriptions (62% vs 23%) and referral (62.7% vs 30.6%) rates were significantly higher in persistent symptom episodes.

Conclusion: Symptom diagnoses are highly prevalent (58%) of which a considerable part (16%) persists more than a year.

Keywords: Epidemiology; Family Medicine; Morbidity; Retrospective Studies; Signs and Symptoms.

MeSH terms

  • Comorbidity
  • Female
  • General Practitioners*
  • Humans
  • Incidence
  • Prevalence
  • Retrospective Studies