To determine whether patient expectations are fulfilled when they are expressed to physicians, self-administrated questionnaires
were given to 360 consecutive ambulatory patients. Information was randomly given or not given to physicians. Diagnosis (94%),
information about prognosis (82%) and prevention (76%), and continuing care (80%) were important expectations. There was no
agreement between global or individual patient expectation and physician response (kappa ≤ 0.3). The physicians prescribed
more medications than expected, and almost never discussed prevention or prognosis. Finally, the characteristics of care were
not different between the physicians who knew and those who did not know patient expectations. The authors conclude that ambulatory
patients visit physicians to receive a diagnosis, continuing care, and information about prognosis and prevention. In this
study, physician knowledge of those expectations did not increase their fulfillment.
Key words consumer expectations - ambulatory care - physicians - patients
Received from the Department of Medicine, Hôpital Cantonal Universitaire, Geneva, Switzerland.
Presented at the annual meeting of the Society of General Internal Medicine, April 28–30, 1991, Arlington, Virginia.