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  3. Physicians’ attitudes toward, use of, and perceived barriers to clinical guidelines: a survey among Swiss physicians
 

Physicians’ attitudes toward, use of, and perceived barriers to clinical guidelines: a survey among Swiss physicians

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BORIS DOI
10.7892/boris.92243
Publisher DOI
10.2147/AMEP.S115149
PubMed ID
28008300
Description
BACKGROUND:

Little is known about the attitudes toward, use of, and perceived barriers to clinical guidelines in Switzerland, a country with no national guideline agency. Moreover, there is no available data on the objective assessment of guideline knowledge in Switzerland. Therefore, we conducted a study at a large university's Department of General Internal Medicine in Switzerland to assess physicians' attitudes toward, use of, perceived barriers to, and knowledge of clinical guidelines.
PARTICIPANTS AND METHODS:

Ninety-six physicians (residents, n=78, and attendings, n=18) were invited to take part in a survey. Attitudes toward, self-reported use of, and barriers hindering adherence to the clinical guidelines were assessed using established scales and frameworks. Knowledge of the guidelines was objectively tested in a written assessment comprising of 14 multiple-choice and 3 short answer case-based questions.
RESULTS:

Fifty-five participants completed the survey (residents, n=42, and attendings, n=13; overall response rate 57%). Of these, 50 took part in the knowledge assessment (residents, n=37, and attendings, n=13; overall response rate 52%). Attitudes toward guidelines were favorable. They were considered to be a convenient source of advice (94% agreement), good educational tools (89% agreement), and likely to improve patient quality of care (91% agreement). Self-reported use of guidelines was limited, with only one-third reporting using guidelines often or very often. The main barriers to guideline adherence were identified as lack of guideline awareness and familiarity, applicability of existing guidelines to multimorbid patients, unfavorable guideline factors, and lack of time as well as inertia toward changing previous practice. In the assessment of guideline knowledge, the scores were rather modest (mean ± standard deviation: 60.5%±12.7% correct answers).
CONCLUSION:

In general, this study found favorable physician attitudes toward clinical guidelines. However, several barriers hindering guideline implementation were identified. The importance of improving guideline implementation was supported by modest results in a guideline knowledge test.
Date of Publication
2016-11-13
Publication Type
Article
Subject(s)
600 Technology > 610 Medicine & health
Language(s)
en
Contributor(s)
Birrenbach, Tanja Nicole
Clinic of General Internal Medicine
Krähenmann, Simone Eva
Universitätsklinik für Allgemeine Innere Medizin
Perrig, Martin
Clinic of General Internal Medicine
Berendonk, Christoph
Institut für Medizinische Lehre, Assessment und Evaluation (AAE)
Huwendiek, Sören
Institut für Medizinische Lehre, Assessment und Evaluation (AAE)
Additional Credits
Institut für Medizinische Lehre, Assessment und Evaluation (AAE)
Clinic of General Internal Medicine
Universitätsklinik für Allgemeine Innere Medizin
Series
Advances in medical education and practice
Publisher
Dove Medical Press
ISSN
1179-7258
Access(Rights)
open.access
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