Department of General Practice and Primary Care, University Medical Center Hamburg-Eppendorf, Hamburg, Germany
Institute of Medical Sociology, University Medical Center Hamburg-Eppendorf, Hamburg, Germany.
BMJ Open. 2022 Mar 10;12(3):e054025. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2021-054025.
Men and women at any age show similar symptoms and signs of heart failure (HF). Since early HF symptoms are ambiguous, doctors may overlook HF as possible cause and misinterpret the signs. The aim was to analyse differences in general practitioners' (GPs) HF diagnosis and diagnostic certainty by patient age and gender and to identify reasons for possible differences.
Factorial design with video vignettes presenting patients (played by professional actors) with early HF symptoms was used. Video vignettes differed regarding patients' gender (male/female), age (55 years/75 years) and migration background (no/yes: Turkish), while the dialogue was identical. GPs were asked about possible diagnoses and certainty of diagnoses (quantitative) and to narrate their thoughts on considered diagnoses (qualitative).
General practices in northern Germany.
128 GPs stratified by gender and length of clinical experience (≤15 years or >15 years).
GPs considered HF more often in women than men (predicted probabilities with 95% CI: 0.83 (0.68 to 0.92) vs 0.63 (0.44 to 0.79), p=0.02), especially in older women compared with younger men (predicted probabilities with 95% CI: 0.89 (0.68 to 0.96) vs 0.52 (0.31 to 0.72), p=0,03). Suspected HF was not reasoned by the patient's gender and only seldom by the patient's age, but by reported symptoms. Diagnostic certainty of HF was higher in women than in men (predicted proportions with 95% CI: 0.48 (0.39 to 0.58) vs 0.36 (0.27 to 0.45), p=0.01), with highest certainty in older women and lowest in younger men (0.57 (0.45 to 0.69) vs 0.27 (0.17 to 0.37), p<0.01). GPs explained their certainty referring to both typical HF symptoms and their gut feeling.
Despite an identical dialogue, the study showed differences by patients' gender and age in frequency and certainty of HF diagnosis. In order to avoid that GPs overlook or misinterpret early signs of HF, it is important to critically reflect diagnostic decisions and possible social influences.
无论年龄大小,男性和女性都表现出类似的心衰(HF)症状和体征。由于早期 HF 症状不明确,医生可能会忽略 HF 作为可能的病因,并错误地解释这些体征。目的是分析医生根据患者年龄和性别对 HF 的诊断和诊断确定性的差异,并确定可能存在差异的原因。
使用呈现有早期 HF 症状的患者(由专业演员扮演)的视频小插曲进行析因设计。视频小插曲在患者的性别(男/女)、年龄(55 岁/75 岁)和移民背景(无/有:土耳其)方面有所不同,而对话则完全相同。医生被问及可能的诊断和诊断的确定性(定量),并讲述他们对考虑诊断的想法(定性)。
德国北部的全科诊所。
按性别和临床经验长短(≤15 年或>15 年)分层的 128 名全科医生。
医生认为女性比男性更容易出现 HF(预测概率 95%CI:0.83(0.68 至 0.92)比 0.63(0.44 至 0.79),p=0.02),尤其是老年女性比年轻男性更容易出现 HF(预测概率 95%CI:0.89(0.68 至 0.96)比 0.52(0.31 至 0.72),p=0.03)。疑似 HF 不是由患者的性别,也很少由患者的年龄引起,而是由报告的症状引起的。女性的 HF 诊断确定性高于男性(预测比例 95%CI:0.48(0.39 至 0.58)比 0.36(0.27 至 0.45),p=0.01),年龄较大的女性确定性最高,年龄较小的男性确定性最低(0.57(0.45 至 0.69)比 0.27(0.17 至 0.37),p<0.01)。医生根据典型的 HF 症状和他们的直觉来解释他们的确定性。
尽管对话相同,但研究结果显示,HF 诊断的频率和确定性因患者的性别和年龄而异。为了避免医生忽视或错误解释 HF 的早期迹象,重要的是要批判性地反思诊断决策和可能存在的社会影响。