Relationship between psychosocial problems and satisfaction with GP communication in German primary care practices: a structural equation model based on the cross-sectional GPCare-1 patient study.

Relationship between psychosocial problems and satisfaction with GP communication in German primary care practices: a structural equation model based on the cross-sectional GPCare-1 patient study.

Publication date: May 07, 2025

This study examined the relationship between primary care patients’ psychosocial problems, other patient characteristics that are associated with satisfaction with overall care and satisfaction with general practitioner (GP) communication. A cross-sectional survey was conducted. Patients filled an anonymous two-page questionnaire on various socio-demographic, medical characteristics and their satisfaction with GP communication. Structural equation modelling evaluated associations of various patient characteristics, including psychosocial problems with GP communication. General practices in Germany. A total of 813 patients from 12 GP practices participated. The survey was conducted in summer 2020 during a COVID-19 lockdown. The estimated response rate was 24. 1%. The prevalence of psychosocial problems in the sample was 30%. The three most frequent problems were excessive stress at work (19%), financial problems/debts (9%) and loneliness (8%). Most patients agreed that their GP takes their problems seriously (71%), feeling comfortable talking about sensitive things (66%), having enough space in communication (62%) and being asked by their GP about personal strains (53%). Higher social support, preference to solve one’s problem without GP help, higher age and better health status predicted more satisfaction with physician-patient communication, while the number of psychosocial problems, gender, years with physician, chronic stress and depression had no influence. According to the Bentler Comparative Fit Index, the pooled structural equation model had a 97. 6% better fit than the corresponding model without covariate effects. Higher social support, preference to solve one’s problem without GP help, higher age and better health status but not the number of psychosocial problems predicted more satisfaction with physician-patient communication. GPs should be aware of the high occurrence of patients’ psychosocial problems and actively address patients’ social support and self-management preferences which influence patients’ satisfaction with GP communication. The General Practice Care-1 study was registered in the German Clinical Trials Register (DRKS00022330).

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Concepts Keywords
Drks00022330 Adult
Germany Aged
Loneliness Communication
Physician COVID-19
Summer Cross-Sectional Studies
Female
General Practice
Germany
Humans
Latent Class Analysis
Male
Middle Aged
Patient Satisfaction
Physician-Patient Relations
Primary Health Care
Primary Health Care
PUBLIC HEALTH
SARS-CoV-2
SOCIAL MEDICINE
Social Support
Stress, Psychological
Surveys and Questionnaires

Semantics

Type Source Name
disease MESH COVID-19
disease MESH loneliness
drug DRUGBANK Tropicamide
disease MESH health status
disease MESH depression
disease MESH morbidity
disease MESH cerebrovascular diseases
disease MESH cancer
drug DRUGBANK Indoleacetic acid
disease MESH high blood pressure
disease MESH TICS
drug DRUGBANK Trestolone
disease MESH death
disease MESH physical attacks
disease MESH Migraine
disease MESH Stress Psychological

Original Article

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