Correlates of Physician Utilization: Why Do Major Multivariate Studies of Physician Utilization Find Trivial Psychosocial and Organizational Effects?

1979 Journal of Health and Social Behavior 248 citations

Abstract

This paper examines some major discrepancies in the literature on behavior involving psychosocial and organizational factors affecting physician utilization. At issue is why the large-scale multivariate studies find that such factors explain only small amounts of variation, whereas qualitative and more restricted quantitative studies find these predictors to be more influential. Among the factors accounting for discrepancies in results are the interpretation of illness measures, differences in concept measurement and data aggregation, and the crosssectional versus processual analytical approaches to studying this issue. It is suggested that the advantages of both types of studies can be combined, facilitating improved theory and prediction.

Keywords

PsychosocialMultivariate statisticsMultivariate analysisInterpretation (philosophy)PsychologyIllness behaviorScale (ratio)Organizational behaviorSocial psychologyClinical psychologyActuarial scienceEconomicsStatisticsPsychiatryMathematicsComputer scienceGeography

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Publication Info

Year
1979
Type
article
Volume
20
Issue
4
Pages
387-387
Citations
248
Access
Closed

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Cite This

David Mechanic (1979). Correlates of Physician Utilization: Why Do Major Multivariate Studies of Physician Utilization Find Trivial Psychosocial and Organizational Effects?. Journal of Health and Social Behavior , 20 (4) , 387-387. https://doi.org/10.2307/2955413

Identifiers

DOI
10.2307/2955413