Children aged 6-12 years are usually seen in primary care with an adult carer. It is a government and professional priority for doctors to try and involve these children in their medical consultations.
AimTo ascertain the evidence available on the amount and type of involvement that children in the 6-12 year age group have in their primary care consultations when the consultation was held with a child, a GP, and an adult.
Design of the studyLiterature review.
Child involvement in the primary care consultation is associated with adult carers being able to voice their own concerns early in the consultation, and children being invited to speak with the appropriate recipient design.
Because only 2% of the 47% of cancer patients with psychiatric disorders receive psychiatric consultations, the authors investigated the impact of a psychiatric liaison program on improving consultation rates on a gynecologic oncology unit. Consultation rates for gynecologic cancer patients before and after introduction of the program were compared to rates from other cancer patients in the same hospital during the same 7-year period. Rates for the gynecologic patients were higher after the program (9%) than before (4%), as were rates for follow-up consultations, and the detection of minor DSM-III disorders improved. The authors conclude that liaison improves access to psychiatric treatments that often enhance the quality of life for seriously ill patients.
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