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Piling high: a general practice registrar’s unsolicited mail

Amanda M Torkington, Robyn G Preston and David T Brandts-Giesen
Med J Aust 2010; 193 (11): 728-729. || doi: 10.5694/j.1326-5377.2010.tb04126.x
Published online: 6 December 2010
Methods

The study participant was a female general practice registrar employed to work five sessions each week in a private general practice located in Charters Towers, north Queensland. At the time of the study, she was also undertaking an academic general practice post as part of her training, and from March to May 2010 studied for fellowship examinations.

The study participant collected all mail addressed directly to her that was received at her practice address over the 7-month period from 1 March to 30 September 2010. Any solicited mail (eg, journals for which the participant had initiated a subscription) was excluded from the study.

Collection of unsolicited mail had initially commenced on 1 February 2010, but we identified that the collection process was compromised. Practice administration staff had been discarding some unsolicited mail, rather than delivering all mail to the participant’s in-tray, with the aim of reducing her workload. Administration staff were subsequently advised to place all directly addressed mail in the participant’s in-tray, and a sign reminding staff to do this was placed on the in-tray.

As the participant cleared her in-tray, she marked on each item of mail the action taken with it as:

She then placed all eligible mail in a cardboard box in her office.

At the completion of the collection period, each piece of mail was read by at least one of us, and we developed a coding schema using a simplified inductive thematic qualitative method.3 We then re-read and categorised each document. Data on the initial action taken with each piece of mail were compiled and analysed using simple descriptive statistics.

Results

After initial qualitative analysis of the mail items, we agreed on the following coding groups:

Over the 7-month period of the study, the participant received 196 items of unsolicited mail weighing 19.85 kg in total (Box). The category with the largest number of items was drug company correspondence (70; 36%), closely followed by medical tabloids and free journals (67; 34%). Medical tabloids and free journals made up the largest proportion of unsolicited mail by weight (15.49 kg; 78%) (Box). Of all unsolicited mail items, 5% (10/196) were “more than half read”; and of the 70 items from a pharmaceutical company, only six were categorised as “less than half read” or “more than half read” (Box).

Discussion

Our study of unsolicited mail received by a general practice registrar over a 7-month period, and actions taken with it, showed that of the large amount of unsolicited mail received, a very small proportion was read in detail. The number and total weight of unsolicited mail items received suggest that a reduction in unsolicited mail would have benefits for GPs in reducing the amount of time they take to sort mail, as well as environmental benefits.2 If all 25 726 GPs in Australia in 2008–20094 received a similar amount of mail during the study period to our participant, about 510 660 kg of unsolicited mail would have been received by GPs over the 7 months.

In our study, the participant considered only a small proportion of pharmaceutical company correspondence, such as safety updates or information regarding new products, to be important for her clinical practice. It is concerning that, with the large amount of mail received, practitioners may not read important communications such as changes to safety warnings for pharmaceutical products.

Our results suggest that Australian GPs receive significantly fewer unsolicited mail items than some practitioners in the US. Assuming that a similar amount of mail arrives each month, we estimate that our participant would receive 34 kg over a 12-month period, compared with the 122 kg received by an emergency medicine physician in San Francisco in 1999.1

Our study had several limitations. Its small sample size of one participant may limit the generalisability of our results. Practitioners may value different information, and the proportion of mail read might therefore differ substantially between practitioners. Further, practitioners may receive differing amounts of mail. Also, the participant was studying for fellowship examinations for the first 3 months of the study and it is possible that her well honed procrastination skills may have resulted in a larger-than-usual amount of unsolicited mail being read (and might even have been the stimulus for commencing the study).

We believe that A T’s level of frustration with mail would be significantly reduced if a reduction in unsolicited mail occurred.

  • Amanda M Torkington1
  • Robyn G Preston1
  • David T Brandts-Giesen2

  • 1 School of Medicine and Dentistry, James Cook University, Townsville, QLD.
  • 2 Faculty of Health Sciences, Discipline of Public Health, Flinders University, Adelaide, SA.



Competing interests:

None identified.

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