Abstract

Among primary health care patients, it is sometimes impossible to assign a definitive diagnosis for the patient's reported or observed symptoms. Therefore, symptomatic diagnoses are often used. The aim of the present study was to examine the proportion of symptomatic diagnoses among primary health care patients. We also explored which symptomatic diagnoses were most frequently recorded as well as their age and gender distribution. This is a register-based study in the public primary health care of the city of Vantaa, Finland. Diagnoses were entered according to the 10th revision of the International Classification of Diseases (ICD-10). The data consisted of every diagnosis entered into the electronic health record between January first 2016 and December 31st 2018. Both absolute numbers and relative proportions of various symptomatic diagnosis recordings (chapter 'R') were reported. Of all the recorded diagnoses (N=503,001), the proportion of R-diagnoses was 13.5% (N=67,905). Diagnoses of symptoms and signs involving the digestive system and abdomen (R10-19) (4.1% of all; n=18,550), the circulatory and respiratory systems (R00-09) (3.9%; n=17,426), general symptoms and signs (R50-69) (3.4%; n=15,165), and the skin and subcutaneous tissue (R20-23) (2.2%; n=9,812) were the most prevalent. Age was also a major factor determining how the symptomatic diagnoses were distributed between women and men. Overall, the symptomatic diagnoses were more common among women than men (14.1% and 12.4%, respectively). The major symptomatic diagnosis categories, including symptoms and signs involving the digestive system and abdomen, the skin and the subcutaneous tissue, and general symptoms and signs, were more predominant among women, while symptoms and signs involving the circulatory and respiratory systems were more common among men. A symptomatic diagnosis code was recorded in about one eighth of the GP appointments, although there were significant sex differences in the prevalence within and between diagnosis groups.

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