Persistent Physical Symptoms—Healthcare Workers’ Experiences of Current Models of Care
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Method
2.2. Design and Participants
2.3. Recruitment
2.4. Interviews
2.5. Data Analysis
3. Results
3.1. Challenges of the Early Identification and Management of PPS
I don’t think I have used it with patients at all… I mean I think probably knowing more about it and learning more about it, I might be more inclined to use it(GP 01)
I think it was not knowing what happens next, if it gets beyond me what am I supposed to do with it? I don’t want to open that can of worms, and then have no were to go…you can go and speak to your GP about it’(HCP 01)
3.2. Moving Away from Search and Fix to Support and Manage
These people need to be grouped and supported and they should be a physio, an OT, a psychologist, and a doctor working in a group setting…whereby they recognise that there’s more people in the world with this and there is a way out and talking about the pathways of what they can do…good self-care, what makes you feel better…and if GPs could refer in that would be really helpful to them because it’s going to cut the visits down(HCP 03)
We do a multidisciplinary team meeting every week and this morning one of the surgeons was scratching his head about a guy whose got ongoing abdominal pain and nothing to show for it, and myself and one of the other specialist nurses chipped in and said have you heard of PPS…and he was like how do I refer into this? How do I get more involved with that?(HCP 01)
3.3. Moving Care from Hospitals to the Community
Having a GP and a social prescriber working together with the various community services… its only for an afternoon, but if you could have like a couple of them…working together collectively…and they get that sort of overall holistic care(GP 09)
I would certainly think about social prescribers because we as GPs we cannot really keep our heads across all community services that are there(GP 10)
4. Discussion
Strengths and Limitations
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
Abbreviations
PPS | Persistent Physical Symptoms |
SCI | Symptoms Clinic Interventions |
Appendix A
- (1)
- How familiar are you with the term persistent physical symptoms?
- (2)
- How likely are you to use the term PPS, or how often do you refer to this term?
- (3)
- Can you describe your experience of working with patients with PPS?
- (4)
- How do you feel about dealing with patients with PPS?
- (5)
- Can you describe a consultation that you may have with a patient with PPS?
- (6)
- Who is best suited to making a PPS diagnosis?
- (7)
- What treatments are your PPS patients offered?
- (8)
- What difficulties/challenges have you faced when working with patients with PPS?
- (9)
- What are the current gaps in treatment for patients?
- (10)
- Is there any specific training that you feel you need?
- (11)
- What emotions do you feel when dealing with patients with PPS?
- (12)
- In terms of the therapeutic relationship between clinicians and patients how confident are you in recognising psychosocial cues that patients may present during consultations?
- (13)
- How confident would you feel around having discussions with your patients around psychological issues?
- (14)
- What are your thoughts on psychologically informed consultations that address both mind and body links in consultation with patients?
- (15)
- How would you feel about being trained to deliver psychologically informed care by making small shifts in your consultations?
- (16)
- Do you think we will ever get to a point where we use PPS as common language in healthcare?
- (17)
- How should we shape the future care pathways/interventions for patients?
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Dismore, L.; Thursby, S.; Pearce, G.-D.; Goff, I.; Ferguson, D.; Tomson, D.; Swainston, K. Persistent Physical Symptoms—Healthcare Workers’ Experiences of Current Models of Care. Psychol. Int. 2025, 7, 24. https://doi.org/10.3390/psycholint7010024
Dismore L, Thursby S, Pearce G-D, Goff I, Ferguson D, Tomson D, Swainston K. Persistent Physical Symptoms—Healthcare Workers’ Experiences of Current Models of Care. Psychology International. 2025; 7(1):24. https://doi.org/10.3390/psycholint7010024
Chicago/Turabian StyleDismore, Lorelle, Stacie Thursby, Gail-Dovey Pearce, Iain Goff, Diarmaid Ferguson, David Tomson, and Katherine Swainston. 2025. "Persistent Physical Symptoms—Healthcare Workers’ Experiences of Current Models of Care" Psychology International 7, no. 1: 24. https://doi.org/10.3390/psycholint7010024
APA StyleDismore, L., Thursby, S., Pearce, G.-D., Goff, I., Ferguson, D., Tomson, D., & Swainston, K. (2025). Persistent Physical Symptoms—Healthcare Workers’ Experiences of Current Models of Care. Psychology International, 7(1), 24. https://doi.org/10.3390/psycholint7010024