Abstract

Context: Despite evidence demonstrating the benefits of understanding patients, there is a paucity of information about how physicians address psychological and social concerns of patients. No one study has been published about the incidence of crying in General/Family Practice. Objective: To know the incidence of crying in primary care/general practice, and the patients’ characteristics, their reasons for encounter and their health problems. Design: A descriptive, prospective study, of one year, of three general practitioners/family physicians in Madrid, Spain. Setting: primary care (doctors’ office and patients’ home). Subjects: Face to face encounters with crying patients. Main outcome measure: At least one rolling tear. Results: Patients cried in 157 encounters out of a total of 18,627 giving an incidence rate of 8.4 per thousand. More frequent reasons for encounters were: feeling depressed (12.7%), social handicap (mainly social isolation/living alone) (6.4%), relationship problem with partner (5.1%) and feeling anxious (3.2%). More frequent health problems were: depressive disorder (23.6%), anxiety disorder (8.3%), cerebrovascular disease (5.1%) and loss/death of partner (3.8%). Conclusions: Crying in primary care is not uncommon. Reasons for crying cover the whole range of human problems, mainly social and psychological problems.

Highlights

  • General practitioners see patients as persons in the context of their ongoing life stories

  • All facet of life – physical, psychological, sexual, emotional, social, labour – influence the problems patients bring to their general practitioners[1]

  • The aim of this study was to know the incidence of crying in general practice and the patients’ characteristics, their reasons for encounter and their medical problems

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Summary

Introduction

General practitioners see patients as persons in the context of their ongoing life stories. All facet of life – physical, psychological, sexual, emotional, social, labour – influence the problems patients bring to their general practitioners[1]. Physicians report distress and lack of therapeutic tools to deal with an angry patient, a tearful patient, a frightened patient, or one who seems unable to make a pressing decision. Those strong feelings will keep coming up in the interview if we do not do something therapeutic about them. It is not easy to cope with difficult situations but general practitioners have frequents troublesome patient encounters. Understanding patients’ feelings involves the qualities of pity, sympathy and empathy[3]

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