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LetterCorrespondence

Re: Home Visits and the Social Context

John J. Frey
The Journal of the American Board of Family Medicine May 2013, 26 (3) 339; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3122/jabfm.2013.03.120328
John J. Frey
Department of Family Medicine University of Wisconsin, Madison
III, MD
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To the Editor:

The article by Peterson and colleagues1 and commentary by Hamrick2 outline the “shape” of physician house calls at this point in time, and Hamrick raises compelling reasons to broaden the practice, particularly in the coming era of health care reform. House calls make sense for any number of economic and quality of care reasons. But house calls also make sense in helping to remedy the social ignorance of physicians about the lives of our patients. Physicians, who predominately come from one social class,3 need to learn how our patients who struggle with financial and social as well as medical obstacles live their lives.

When I visited Japan this year and learned that Japanese general practitioners spend up to a third of their daily visits as home visits, I was, to be honest, surprised. When I told the Japanese residents whom I was teaching that American Academy of Family Physicians data show that U.S. family doctors do, on average, less than one house call per week, they expressed amazement. They asked me, “How do you know anything about your patients’ lives if you don’t make house calls?” How, indeed? The answer is that we don’t, or that we understand our patients only in the context of offices and hospitals where we arrange the pictures, we set up the furniture, we stock the fridge, and we feel powerful and comfortable.

Real patient- and family-centered care requires understanding the context of our patients’ lives on our patients’ terms. To do this, we need to demand organizational and payment reforms that are necessary to help us bring that context into our care. We also need to demand that any “new models” of primary care graduate education require substantial, not token, involvement with our patients in the community where they live. House calls may also teach us necessary humility about how our office admonitions relate to the complex, rich, and eventful lives our patients live in their “real world,” not our office examining rooms.

Notes

  • The above letter was referred to the authors of the article in question, who offers the following reply.

References

  1. 1.↵
    1. Peterson LE,
    2. Landers SH,
    3. Bazemore A
    . Trends in physician house calls to Medicare beneficiaries. J Am Board Fam Med 2012;25:862–8.
    OpenUrlAbstract/FREE Full Text
  2. 2.↵
    1. Hamrick I
    . More house calls by fewer physicians. J Am Board Fam Med 2012;25: 759–60.
    OpenUrlFREE Full Text
  3. 3.↵
    1. Jolly P
    . Analysis in brief. Diversity of US medical students by parental income. Washington, DC: Association of American Medical Colleges; 2008. Available from https://www.aamc. org/download/102338/data/aibvol8no1.pdf. Accessed March 11, 2013.
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The Journal of the American Board of Family     Medicine: 26 (3)
The Journal of the American Board of Family Medicine
Vol. 26, Issue 3
May-June 2013
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Re: Home Visits and the Social Context
John J. Frey
The Journal of the American Board of Family Medicine May 2013, 26 (3) 339; DOI: 10.3122/jabfm.2013.03.120328

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Re: Home Visits and the Social Context
John J. Frey
The Journal of the American Board of Family Medicine May 2013, 26 (3) 339; DOI: 10.3122/jabfm.2013.03.120328
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