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  Vol. 153 No. 7, July 1999 TABLE OF CONTENTS
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The Pediatric Primary-Specialty Care Interface

How Pediatricians Refer Children and Adolescents to Specialty Care

Christopher B. Forrest, MD, PhD; Gordon B. Glade, MD; Alison E. Baker, MS; Alison B. Bocian, MS; Myungsa Kang, MHS; Barbara Starfield, MD, MPH

Arch Pediatr Adolesc Med. 1999;153:705-714.

Objective  To describe how pediatricians refer patients to specialists, including frequency of referral decisions, reasons for referral, and types of referrals.

Design  We conducted a prospective study of visits (N=58,771) made to 142 pediatricians in a national primary care practice–based research network. During 20 consecutive practice days, physicians and parents completed questionnaires for referred patients, and office staff kept logs of all visits. Physicians used medical records to complete questionnaires 3 months after referrals were made.

Results  Pediatricians referred patients to specialists during 2.3% of office visits. Referrals made during telephone conversations with parents accounted for 27.5% of all referrals. The most common reason for referral was advice on diagnosis or treatment (74.3%). Referrals were made most commonly to surgical subspecialists (52.3%), followed by medical subspecialists (27.9%), nonphysicians (11.4%), and mental health practitioners (8.4%). Physicians requested a consultation or a referral with shared management in 75% of cases. Otitis media was the condition referred most often (9.2%). Fifty other conditions accounted for 84.3% of all referrals.

Conclusions  About 1 in 40 pediatric visits result in referral. Getting advice from a specialist is the most common reason for referral. Pediatricians desire a collaborative relationship with specialists for most of their referred patients. Physician training to increase clinical competence may be most useful for the 50 most commonly referred conditions. Education concerning the referral process should focus on the respective roles of the referring physician and specialist, particularly as they pertain to successful approaches for comanaging referred patients.


From the Department of Health Policy and Management, Johns Hopkins School of Public Health, Baltimore, Md (Drs Forrest and Starfield and Ms Kang); Pediatric Research in Office Settings, American Academy of Pediatrics, Elk Grove Village, Ill (Dr Glade and Mss Baker and Bocian); and the Department of Pediatrics, University of Utah School of Medicine, Salt Lake City (Dr Glade).



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