Identifying important health system factors that influence primary care practitioners’ referrals for cancer suspicion: a European cross-sectional survey
Objectives Cancer survival and stage of disease at diagnosis and treatment vary widely across Europe. These differences may be partly due to variations in access to investigations and specialists. However, evidence to explain how different national health systems influence primary care practitioners’ (PCPs’) referral decisions is lacking.This study analyses health system factors potentially influencing PCPs’ referral decision-making when consulting with patients who may have cancer, and how these vary between European countries.Design Based on a content-validity consensus, a list of 45 items relating to a PCP’s decisions to refer patients with potential cancer symptoms for further investigation was reduced to 20 items. An online questionnaire with the 20 items was answered by PCPs on a five-point Likert scale, indicating how much each item affected their own decision-making in patients that could have cancer. An exploratory factor analysis identified the factors underlying PCPs’ referral decision-making.Setting A primary care study; 25 participating centres in 20 European countries.Participants 1830 PCPs completed the survey. The median response rate for participating centres was 20.7\%.Outcome measures The factors derived from items related to PCPs’ referral decision-making. Mean factor scores were produced for each country, allowing comparisons.Results Factor analysis identified five underlying factors: PCPs’ ability to refer; degree of direct patient access to secondary care; PCPs’ perceptions of being under pressure; expectations of PCPs’ role; and extent to which PCPs believe that quality comes before cost in their health systems. These accounted for 47.4\% of the observed variance between individual responses.Conclusions Five healthcare system factors influencing PCPs’ referral decision-making in 20 European countries were identified. The factors varied considerably between European countries. Knowledge of these factors could assist development of health service policies to produce better cancer outcomes, and inform future research to compare national cancer diagnostic pathways and outcomes.
Description
Identifying important health system factors that influence primary care practitioners’ referrals for cancer suspicion: a European cross-sectional survey | BMJ Open
%0 Journal Article
%1 Harrise022904
%A Harris, Michael
%A Vedsted, Peter
%A Esteva, Magdalena
%A Murchie, Peter
%A Aubin-Auger, Isabelle
%A Azuri, Joseph
%A Brekke, Mette
%A Buczkowski, Krzysztof
%A Buono, Nicola
%A Costiug, Emiliana
%A Dinant, Geert-Jan
%A Foreva, Gergana
%A Gasparović Babić, Svjetlana
%A Hoffman, Robert
%A Jakob, Eva
%A Koskela, Tuomas H
%A Marzo-Castillejo, Mercè
%A Neves, Ana Lu\'ısa
%A Petek, Davorina
%A Petek Ster, Marija
%A Sawicka-Powierza, Jolanta
%A Schneider, Antonius
%A Smyrnakis, Emmanouil
%A Streit, Sven
%A Thulesius, Hans
%A Weltermann, Birgitta
%A Taylor, Gordon
%D 2018
%I British Medical Journal Publishing Group
%J BMJ Open
%K grapp-caib
%N 9
%R 10.1136/bmjopen-2018-022904
%T Identifying important health system factors that influence primary care practitioners’ referrals for cancer suspicion: a European cross-sectional survey
%U https://bmjopen.bmj.com/content/8/9/e022904
%V 8
%X Objectives Cancer survival and stage of disease at diagnosis and treatment vary widely across Europe. These differences may be partly due to variations in access to investigations and specialists. However, evidence to explain how different national health systems influence primary care practitioners’ (PCPs’) referral decisions is lacking.This study analyses health system factors potentially influencing PCPs’ referral decision-making when consulting with patients who may have cancer, and how these vary between European countries.Design Based on a content-validity consensus, a list of 45 items relating to a PCP’s decisions to refer patients with potential cancer symptoms for further investigation was reduced to 20 items. An online questionnaire with the 20 items was answered by PCPs on a five-point Likert scale, indicating how much each item affected their own decision-making in patients that could have cancer. An exploratory factor analysis identified the factors underlying PCPs’ referral decision-making.Setting A primary care study; 25 participating centres in 20 European countries.Participants 1830 PCPs completed the survey. The median response rate for participating centres was 20.7\%.Outcome measures The factors derived from items related to PCPs’ referral decision-making. Mean factor scores were produced for each country, allowing comparisons.Results Factor analysis identified five underlying factors: PCPs’ ability to refer; degree of direct patient access to secondary care; PCPs’ perceptions of being under pressure; expectations of PCPs’ role; and extent to which PCPs believe that quality comes before cost in their health systems. These accounted for 47.4\% of the observed variance between individual responses.Conclusions Five healthcare system factors influencing PCPs’ referral decision-making in 20 European countries were identified. The factors varied considerably between European countries. Knowledge of these factors could assist development of health service policies to produce better cancer outcomes, and inform future research to compare national cancer diagnostic pathways and outcomes.
@article{Harrise022904,
abstract = {Objectives Cancer survival and stage of disease at diagnosis and treatment vary widely across Europe. These differences may be partly due to variations in access to investigations and specialists. However, evidence to explain how different national health systems influence primary care practitioners{\textquoteright} (PCPs{\textquoteright}) referral decisions is lacking.This study analyses health system factors potentially influencing PCPs{\textquoteright} referral decision-making when consulting with patients who may have cancer, and how these vary between European countries.Design Based on a content-validity consensus, a list of 45 items relating to a PCP{\textquoteright}s decisions to refer patients with potential cancer symptoms for further investigation was reduced to 20 items. An online questionnaire with the 20 items was answered by PCPs on a five-point Likert scale, indicating how much each item affected their own decision-making in patients that could have cancer. An exploratory factor analysis identified the factors underlying PCPs{\textquoteright} referral decision-making.Setting A primary care study; 25 participating centres in 20 European countries.Participants 1830 PCPs completed the survey. The median response rate for participating centres was 20.7\%.Outcome measures The factors derived from items related to PCPs{\textquoteright} referral decision-making. Mean factor scores were produced for each country, allowing comparisons.Results Factor analysis identified five underlying factors: PCPs{\textquoteright} ability to refer; degree of direct patient access to secondary care; PCPs{\textquoteright} perceptions of being under pressure; expectations of PCPs{\textquoteright} role; and extent to which PCPs believe that quality comes before cost in their health systems. These accounted for 47.4\% of the observed variance between individual responses.Conclusions Five healthcare system factors influencing PCPs{\textquoteright} referral decision-making in 20 European countries were identified. The factors varied considerably between European countries. Knowledge of these factors could assist development of health service policies to produce better cancer outcomes, and inform future research to compare national cancer diagnostic pathways and outcomes.},
added-at = {2022-05-16T21:41:24.000+0200},
author = {Harris, Michael and Vedsted, Peter and Esteva, Magdalena and Murchie, Peter and Aubin-Auger, Isabelle and Azuri, Joseph and Brekke, Mette and Buczkowski, Krzysztof and Buono, Nicola and Costiug, Emiliana and Dinant, Geert-Jan and Foreva, Gergana and Ga{\v s}parovi{\'c} Babi{\'c}, Svjetlana and Hoffman, Robert and Jakob, Eva and Koskela, Tuomas H and Marzo-Castillejo, Merc{\`e} and Neves, Ana Lu{\'\i}sa and Petek, Davorina and Petek Ster, Marija and Sawicka-Powierza, Jolanta and Schneider, Antonius and Smyrnakis, Emmanouil and Streit, Sven and Thulesius, Hans and Weltermann, Birgitta and Taylor, Gordon},
biburl = {https://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/28e8af8bc2185383f770341f79438b464/nachoricci},
description = {Identifying important health system factors that influence primary care practitioners’ referrals for cancer suspicion: a European cross-sectional survey | BMJ Open},
doi = {10.1136/bmjopen-2018-022904},
elocation-id = {e022904},
eprint = {https://bmjopen.bmj.com/content/8/9/e022904.full.pdf},
interhash = {69593c2b6843a235331ee8707812a9f3},
intrahash = {8e8af8bc2185383f770341f79438b464},
issn = {2044-6055},
journal = {BMJ Open},
keywords = {grapp-caib},
number = 9,
publisher = {British Medical Journal Publishing Group},
timestamp = {2022-05-16T21:41:24.000+0200},
title = {Identifying important health system factors that influence primary care practitioners{\textquoteright} referrals for cancer suspicion: a European cross-sectional survey},
url = {https://bmjopen.bmj.com/content/8/9/e022904},
volume = 8,
year = 2018
}