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Why do European primary care physicians sometimes not think of, or act on, a possible cancer diagnosis? A qualitative study
- Hajdarevic, Senada;
- Högberg, Cecilia;
- Marzo-Castillejo, Mercè;
- Siliņa, Vija;
- Sawicka-Powierza, Jolanta;
- Esteva, Magadalena;
- Koskela, Tuomas;
- Petek, Davorina;
- Contreras-Martos, Sara;
- Mangione, Marcello;
- Adžić, Zlata Ožvačić;
- Asenova, Radost;
- Babić, Svjetlana Gašparović;
- Brekke, Mette;
- Buczkowski, Krzysztof;
- Buono, Nicola;
- Çifçili, Saliha Serap;
- Dinant, Geert-Jan;
- Doorn, Babette;
- Hoffman, Robert D;
- Kuodza, George;
- Murchie, Peter;
- Pilv, Liina;
- Puia, Aida;
- Rapalavicius, Aurimas;
- Smyrnakis, Emmanouil;
- Weltermann, Birgitta;
- Harris, Michael
- et al.
Abstract
Background
While primary care physicians (PCPs) play a key role in cancer detection, they can find cancer diagnosis challenging, and some patients have considerable delays between presentation and onward referral.Aim
To explore European PCPs' experiences and views on cases where they considered that they had been slow to think of, or act on, a possible cancer diagnosis.Design & setting
A multicentre European qualitative study, based on an online survey with open-ended questions, asking PCPs for their narratives about cases when they had missed a diagnosis of cancer.Method
Using maximum variation sampling, PCPs in 23 European countries were asked to describe what happened in a case where they were slow to think of a cancer diagnosis, and for their views on why it happened. Thematic analysis was used to analyse the data.Results
A total of 158 PCPs completed the questionnaire. The main themes were as follows: patients' descriptions did not suggest cancer; distracting factors reduced PCPs' cancer suspicions; patients' hesitancy delayed the diagnosis; system factors not facilitating timely diagnosis; PCPs felt that they had acted wrongly; and problems with communicating adequately.Conclusion
The study identified six overarching themes that need to be addressed. Doing so should reduce morbidity and mortality in the small proportion of patients who have a significant, avoidable delay in their cancer diagnosis. The 'Swiss cheese' model of accident causation showed how the themes related to each other.Many UC-authored scholarly publications are freely available on this site because of the UC's open access policies. Let us know how this access is important for you.
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