Treadwell Julian Stephen, Wong Geoff, Milburn-Curtis Coral, Feakins Benjamin, Greenhalgh Trisha
NIHR Doctoral Research Fellow, Nuffield Department of Primary Care Health Sciences, University of Oxford, Oxford, UK
Clinical Research Fellow, Nuffield Department of Primary Care Health Sciences, University of Oxford, Oxford, UK.
BJGP Open. 2020 May 1;4(1). doi: 10.3399/bjgpopen20X101016. Print 2020.
GPs prescribe multiple long-term treatments to their patients. For shared clinical decision-making, understanding of the absolute benefits and harms of individual treatments is needed. International evidence shows that doctors' knowledge of treatment effects is poor but, to the authors knowledge, this has not been researched among GPs in the UK.
To measure the level and range of the quantitative understanding of the benefits and harms of treatments for common long-term conditions (LTCs) among GPs.
DESIGN & SETTING: An online cross-sectional survey was distributed to GPs in the UK.
Participants were asked to estimate the percentage absolute risk reduction or increase conferred by 13 interventions across 10 LTCs on 17 important outcomes. Responses were collated and presented in a novel graphic format to allow detailed visualisation of the findings. Descriptive statistical analysis was performed.
A total of 443 responders were included in the analysis. Most demonstrated poor (and in some cases very poor) knowledge of the absolute benefits and harms of treatments. Overall, an average of 10.9% of responses were correct allowing for ±1% margin in absolute risk estimates and 23.3% allowing a ±3% margin. Eighty-seven point seven per cent of responses overestimated and 8.9% of responses underestimated treatment effects. There was no tendency to differentially overestimate benefits and underestimate harms. Sixty-four point eight per cent of GPs self-reported 'low' to 'very low' confidence in their knowledge.
GPs' knowledge of the absolute benefits and harms of treatments is poor, with inaccuracies of a magnitude likely to meaningfully affect clinical decision-making and impede conversations with patients regarding treatment choices.
全科医生会为患者开出多种长期治疗方案。为了进行共同的临床决策,需要了解个体治疗的绝对益处和危害。国际证据表明,医生对治疗效果的了解程度较低,但据作者所知,在英国的全科医生中尚未对此进行研究。
测量全科医生对常见长期病症(LTCs)治疗的益处和危害的定量理解水平和范围。
对英国的全科医生进行了一项在线横断面调查。
要求参与者估计10种长期病症的13种干预措施对17项重要结局所带来的绝对风险降低或增加的百分比。对回答进行整理,并以一种新颖的图形格式呈现结果,以便对研究结果进行详细的可视化展示。进行描述性统计分析。
共有443名应答者纳入分析。大多数人对治疗的绝对益处和危害了解不足(在某些情况下非常不足)。总体而言,在绝对风险估计允许±1%误差范围时,平均只有10.9%的回答正确;允许±3%误差范围时,这一比例为23.3%。87.7%的回答高估了治疗效果;8.9%的回答低估了治疗效果。不存在对益处高估而对危害低估的差异倾向。64.8%的全科医生自我报告对自己的知识“低”到“非常低”的信心。
全科医生对治疗的绝对益处和危害了解不足,这种不准确程度可能会对临床决策产生重大影响,并阻碍与患者就治疗选择进行沟通。