Abstract

BackgroundPhysicians have an important but problematic task to issue sickness certifications. A manifold of studies have identified a wide spectrum of medical and insurance-related problems in sickness certification. Despite educational efforts aiming to improve physicians’ knowledge of social insurance medicine there are no signs of reduction of these problems. We hypothesised that the quality deficits is not only due to lack of knowledge among issuing physicians. The aim of the study was to explore physicians’ challenges when handling sickness certification in relation to their professional roles as physicians and to their interaction with different stakeholders.MethodsOne hundred seventy-seven physicians in Stockholm County, Sweden, participated in a sick-listing audit program. Participants identified challenges in handling sick-leave issues and formulated action plans for improvement. Challenges and responsible stakeholders were identified in the action plans. To deepen the understanding facilitators of the program were interviewed. A qualitative content analysis was performed exploring challenge categories and categories of stakeholders with responsibility to initiate actions to improve the quality of the sick-listing process. The challenge categories were then related by their content to professional competence roles in accord with the Canadian Medical Education Directions for Specialists (CanMEDS) framework and to the stakeholder categories.ResultsSeven categories of challenges were identified. Practitioner patient interaction, Work capacity assessment, Interaction with the Social Insurance Administration, The patient’s workplace and the labour market, Sick-listing practice, Collaboration and resource allocation within the Health Care System, Leadership and routines at the Health Care Unit. The challenges were related to all seven CanMEDS roles. Five categories of stakeholders were identified and several stakeholders were involved in each challenge category.ConclusionsPhysicians performing sickness certification tasks experience a complex variety of challenges. From physician perspective actions to handle these need to be initiated in interaction with both medical and non-medical stakeholders. The relation between the challenges and a well-established professional competence framework revealed a complex pattern. Thus, from a public health perspective, educational activities aimed to improve the sick-listing process should address all physician competences including identification and interaction with stakeholders, and not just knowledge of social insurance medicine.

Highlights

  • Physicians have an important but problematic task to issue sickness certifications

  • Instead of one visit at the specialist clinic, the patient first has to see the specialist for a diagnose and has to make an additional appointment to the family doctor for the medical certificate – and that for the same disease

  • The study confirmed that sick listing is a very complex task and that physicians have to interact with others and need to use a combination of professional competences [26] to handle it properly

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Summary

Introduction

A manifold of studies have identified a wide spectrum of medical and insurance-related problems in sickness certification. The aim of the study was to explore physicians’ challenges when handling sickness certification in relation to their professional roles as physicians and to their interaction with different stakeholders. When it includes sick-listing decisions it becomes even more complex In these cases the physician has to evaluate the patients’ medical problem including an assessment of function and work capacity. Based on this assessment the physician issues a medical certificate with. Several other studies in different countries have reported similar findings [14,15,16,17,18,19,20]

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