Chithiramohan Anita, Iliffe Steve, Khattak Iram
Department of Primary Care and Population Health, University College London, London, UK.
The Khattak Memorial Surgery, Birmingham, UK.
Dementia (London). 2019 Feb;18(2):514-529. doi: 10.1177/1471301216682625. Epub 2016 Dec 9.
Overcoming barriers to earlier diagnosis of dementia in primary care is a core ambition of several government initiatives in the UK, with incentives put in place to promote earlier recognition by general practitioners and referral to specialists. This study was designed to explore general practitioners' opinions concerning barriers to diagnosing dementia, following implementation of strategies aimed at reducing them. The study involved in-depth, semi-structured interviews with 13 general practitioners from seven practices in North London or the West Midlands. Thematic analysis of interview transcripts was carried out using the Framework approach. We identified four major themes: organisational factors, clinician-related factors, patient-related factors and societal influences. The study findings revealed barriers previously unidentified in the literature which warrant further investigation, including the limits of diagnostic tools, lack of cultural applicability of these tools, and prioritisation of severe over mildly symptomatic patients by dementia services.
克服基层医疗中痴呆症早期诊断的障碍是英国多项政府举措的核心目标,为此设置了激励措施,以促进全科医生更早识别并转诊至专科医生处。本研究旨在探讨在实施旨在减少痴呆症诊断障碍的策略后,全科医生对这些障碍的看法。该研究对来自伦敦北部或西米德兰兹郡七个诊所的13名全科医生进行了深入的半结构化访谈。使用框架方法对访谈记录进行了主题分析。我们确定了四个主要主题:组织因素、临床医生相关因素、患者相关因素和社会影响。研究结果揭示了文献中先前未发现的障碍,值得进一步研究,包括诊断工具的局限性、这些工具缺乏文化适用性,以及痴呆症服务机构将严重症状患者置于轻度症状患者之上的优先级安排。