How European primary care practitioners think the timeliness of cancer diagnosis can be improved: a thematic analysis.
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BORIS DOI
Date of Publication
September 24, 2019
Publication Type
Article
Division/Institute
Contributor
Thulesius, Hans | |
Neves, Ana Luísa | |
Harker, Sophie | |
Koskela, Tuomas | |
Petek, Davorina | |
Hoffman, Robert | |
Brekke, Mette | |
Buczkowski, Krzysztof | |
Buono, Nicola | |
Costiug, Emiliana | |
Dinant, Geert-Jan | |
Foreva, Gergana | |
Jakob, Eva | |
Marzo-Castillejo, Mercè | |
Murchie, Peter | |
Sawicka-Powierza, Jolanta | |
Schneider, Antonius | |
Smyrnakis, Emmanouil | |
Taylor, Gordon | |
Vedsted, Peter | |
Weltermann, Birgitta | |
Esteva, Magdalena |
Series
BMJ open
ISSN or ISBN (if monograph)
2044-6055
Publisher
BMJ Publishing Group
Language
English
Publisher DOI
PubMed ID
31551382
Uncontrolled Keywords
Description
BACKGROUND
National European cancer survival rates vary widely. Prolonged diagnostic intervals are thought to be a key factor in explaining these variations. Primary care practitioners (PCPs) frequently play a crucial role during initial cancer diagnosis; their knowledge could be used to improve the planning of more effective approaches to earlier cancer diagnosis.
OBJECTIVES
This study sought the views of PCPs from across Europe on how they thought the timeliness of cancer diagnosis could be improved.
DESIGN
In an online survey, a final open-ended question asked PCPs how they thought the speed of diagnosis of cancer in primary care could be improved. Thematic analysis was used to analyse the data.
SETTING
A primary care study, with participating centres in 20 European countries.
PARTICIPANTS
A total of 1352 PCPs answered the final survey question, with a median of 48 per country.
RESULTS
The main themes identified were: patient-related factors, including health education; care provider-related factors, including continuing medical education; improving communication and interprofessional partnership, particularly between primary and secondary care; factors relating to health system organisation and policies, including improving access to healthcare; easier primary care access to diagnostic tests; and use of information technology. Re-allocation of funding to support timely diagnosis was seen as an issue affecting all of these.
CONCLUSIONS
To achieve more timely cancer diagnosis, health systems need to facilitate earlier patient presentation through education and better access to care, have well-educated clinicians with good access to investigations and better information technology, and adequate primary care cancer diagnostic pathway funding.
National European cancer survival rates vary widely. Prolonged diagnostic intervals are thought to be a key factor in explaining these variations. Primary care practitioners (PCPs) frequently play a crucial role during initial cancer diagnosis; their knowledge could be used to improve the planning of more effective approaches to earlier cancer diagnosis.
OBJECTIVES
This study sought the views of PCPs from across Europe on how they thought the timeliness of cancer diagnosis could be improved.
DESIGN
In an online survey, a final open-ended question asked PCPs how they thought the speed of diagnosis of cancer in primary care could be improved. Thematic analysis was used to analyse the data.
SETTING
A primary care study, with participating centres in 20 European countries.
PARTICIPANTS
A total of 1352 PCPs answered the final survey question, with a median of 48 per country.
RESULTS
The main themes identified were: patient-related factors, including health education; care provider-related factors, including continuing medical education; improving communication and interprofessional partnership, particularly between primary and secondary care; factors relating to health system organisation and policies, including improving access to healthcare; easier primary care access to diagnostic tests; and use of information technology. Re-allocation of funding to support timely diagnosis was seen as an issue affecting all of these.
CONCLUSIONS
To achieve more timely cancer diagnosis, health systems need to facilitate earlier patient presentation through education and better access to care, have well-educated clinicians with good access to investigations and better information technology, and adequate primary care cancer diagnostic pathway funding.
File(s)
| File | File Type | Format | Size | License | Publisher/Copright statement | Content | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Harris BMJOpen 2019.pdf | text | Adobe PDF | 792.86 KB | Attribution-NonCommercial (CC BY-NC 4.0) | published |