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How European primary care practitioners think the timeliness of cancer diagnosis can be improved: a thematic analysis

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 th...

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Autores principales: Harris, Michael, 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, Streit, Sven, Taylor, Gordon, Vedsted, Peter, Weltermann, Birgitta, Esteva, Magdalena
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BMJ Publishing Group 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6773305/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31551382
http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2019-030169
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author Harris, Michael
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
Streit, Sven
Taylor, Gordon
Vedsted, Peter
Weltermann, Birgitta
Esteva, Magdalena
author_facet Harris, Michael
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
Streit, Sven
Taylor, Gordon
Vedsted, Peter
Weltermann, Birgitta
Esteva, Magdalena
author_sort Harris, Michael
collection PubMed
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.
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spelling pubmed-67733052019-10-21 How European primary care practitioners think the timeliness of cancer diagnosis can be improved: a thematic analysis Harris, Michael 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 Streit, Sven Taylor, Gordon Vedsted, Peter Weltermann, Birgitta Esteva, Magdalena BMJ Open General practice / Family practice 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. BMJ Publishing Group 2019-09-24 /pmc/articles/PMC6773305/ /pubmed/31551382 http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2019-030169 Text en © Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2019. Re-use permitted under CC BY-NC. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ. This is an open access article distributed in accordance with the Creative Commons Attribution Non Commercial (CC BY-NC 4.0) license, which permits others to distribute, remix, adapt, build upon this work non-commercially, and license their derivative works on different terms, provided the original work is properly cited, appropriate credit is given, any changes made indicated, and the use is non-commercial. See: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/.
spellingShingle General practice / Family practice
Harris, Michael
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
Streit, Sven
Taylor, Gordon
Vedsted, Peter
Weltermann, Birgitta
Esteva, Magdalena
How European primary care practitioners think the timeliness of cancer diagnosis can be improved: a thematic analysis
title How European primary care practitioners think the timeliness of cancer diagnosis can be improved: a thematic analysis
title_full How European primary care practitioners think the timeliness of cancer diagnosis can be improved: a thematic analysis
title_fullStr How European primary care practitioners think the timeliness of cancer diagnosis can be improved: a thematic analysis
title_full_unstemmed How European primary care practitioners think the timeliness of cancer diagnosis can be improved: a thematic analysis
title_short How European primary care practitioners think the timeliness of cancer diagnosis can be improved: a thematic analysis
title_sort how european primary care practitioners think the timeliness of cancer diagnosis can be improved: a thematic analysis
topic General practice / Family practice
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6773305/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31551382
http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2019-030169
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