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The Doctor will see all of you now? Group
Doctor Visits may be feasible for
Parkinson’s Disease
Newswise , April 29, 2011--Group
appointments where doctors see several
people for a longer time may be feasible for
Parkinson’s disease, according to a new
study published in the April 27, 2011,
online issue of Neurology®,
the medical journal of the American Academy
of Neurology (AAN).
Group visits have shown benefits for people
with other chronic conditions, but have not
been evaluated for people with Parkinson’s
disease. Group visits can allow patients
more time with their doctor than they might
have with individual appointments and more
time for doctors to provide education on
managing the disease.
The randomized, controlled study compared
people receiving their normal care from a
physician to people receiving care through
group visits with their regular physician
over one year. Caregivers were also included
in the study.
Those receiving their usual care had
30-minute appointments with their physicians
every three to six months. The group visits
lasted 90 minutes and were held every three
months.
They included introductions, updates from
patients, and an educational session on a
topic chosen by the participants. Time was
allotted for questions from patients or
caregivers, and individual 10-minute
appointments with the physician were
scheduled for before or after the group
visit for individual concerns.
Of the 30 study participants, 27, or 90
percent, completed the study, along with 25,
or 93 percent of the 27 participating
caregivers. At the end of the study, there
was no difference between those receiving
usual care and those participating in the
group visits in how they rated their overall
quality of life.
Participants were asked whether they
preferred the group visits or usual care at
the end of the study. Of the 14 receiving
group visits who responded, eight preferred
the group setting, five preferred usual
care, and one was indifferent. Of those
receiving usual care who responded, five
preferred group visits, six preferred usual
care, and three were undecided. None of the
participants reported any confidentiality
issues.
Study author E. Ray Dorsey, MD, MBA, of
Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine
in Baltimore, MD, and a member of the
American Academy of Neurology, said group
visits have the potential to address
limitations of support groups and
traditional doctor visits.
“While both support groups and traditional
visits have clear benefits, a survey of
people with Parkinson’s showed that they
desire a credible group leader for their
support groups and more information for them
and their caregivers about their disease,”
he said.
“Group visits can address these limitations.
They also give physicians the opportunity to
observe their patients for a longer period
of time and appreciate disease
characteristics such as fluctuations in
their symptoms and daytime sleepiness that
may not readily be appreciated during a
routine 20- to 30-minute office visit."
Dorsey noted that group visits may pose
logistical issues, such as the need for a
large room and scheduling difficulties. He
said that the risk that the lack of a
one-on-one examination could lead physicians
to miss subtle problems could be resolved by
using a hybrid model alternating group and
individual appointments.
Stephen G. Reich, MD, of the University of
Maryland School of Medicine in Baltimore,
MD, who was not involved in the study and
wrote an accompanying editorial, noted that
the study participants all had mild to
moderate Parkinson’s disease, suggesting
that people with more advanced disease may
be less willing to forgo individual
appointments.
The study was supported by a grant from the
National Parkinson Foundation.
The American Academy of Neurology, an
association of more than 24,000 neurologists
and neuroscience professionals, is dedicated
to promoting the highest quality
patient-centered neurologic care. A
neurologist is a doctor with specialized
training in diagnosing, treating and
managing disorders of the brain and nervous
system such as Alzheimer’s disease, stroke,
migraine, multiple sclerosis, brain injury,
Parkinson’s disease and epilepsy.
For more information about the American
Academy of Neurology, visit http://www.aan.com.
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