Sydney School of Public Health, Faculty of Medicine and Health, The University of Sydney, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia.
Sydney Head and Neck Cancer Institute, Department of Head and Neck Surgery, Chris O'Brien Lifehouse, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia.
Aust J Rural Health. 2022 Aug;30(4):501-511. doi: 10.1111/ajr.12859. Epub 2022 Mar 11.
General practitioners (GPs) play a crucial role in cancer care and GPs are often the first doctor that patients with symptoms suggestive of cancer will encounter. Head and neck cancer (HNC) is a relatively uncommon presentation in primary care, and evidence suggests that times to diagnosis and treatment of HNC vary based on geographical location of patients. This may be due to barriers to referral faced by regional or rural GPs as compared to those in metropolitan cities in Australia.
To investigate the effect of geographical location of GPs on management of patients with symptoms suggestive of HNC.
This was a descriptive, analytical, cross-sectional survey. Surveys were sent to GPs at practices in two primary health care networks in New South Wales, Australia (Mid North Coast Primary Healthcare Network and the Central and Eastern Sydney Primary Healthcare Network) between February and May 2020. Main outcome measures were perceived time from referral to specialist appointment, factors affecting timeliness of patient help-seeking, and awareness and use of clinical guidelines.
A total of 1803 GPs were sampled, of which 196 responded (45 regional GPs and 151 metropolitan GPs). Less than half (48%) of regional GPs reported patients could expect to be seen by a specialist within 2 weeks of referral, compared to 70% of metropolitan GPs (p = 0.001). Most metropolitan GPs stated they would refer a patient with suspected HNC to a surgeon subspecialising in HNC. Regional GPs were split between ear, nose, and throat (ENT) and general surgeons. Availability of services was the most common factor influencing referral practices for regional GPs, whereas for metropolitan GPs, this was the patient's symptoms. Awareness of government resources for cancer referrals was generally low.
Regional GPs report patients with HNC are less likely to be seen by a specialist within optimal time frames compared to metropolitan GPs. Respondents reported different barriers to early referral of patients with suspected HNC, with regional GPs more often citing system-level factors while metropolitan GPs more often cited patient-level factors.
Evaluating service provision and uptake with respect to community need, and addressing of barriers to implementation, may minimise unwarranted clinical variation.
全科医生(GP)在癌症治疗中起着至关重要的作用,而且通常是出现疑似癌症症状的患者首先接触的医生。头颈部癌症(HNC)在初级保健中相对少见,有证据表明,HNC 的诊断和治疗时间因患者的地理位置而异。这可能是由于与澳大利亚大都市的全科医生相比,地区或农村全科医生在转诊方面面临的障碍。
调查全科医生地理位置对疑似 HNC 症状患者管理的影响。
这是一项描述性、分析性、横断面调查。2020 年 2 月至 5 月期间,在澳大利亚新南威尔士州的两个初级保健网络(中北部海岸初级保健网络和中东部悉尼初级保健网络)的诊所向全科医生发送了调查。主要结局指标是从转诊到专科预约的感知时间、影响患者寻求帮助及时性的因素以及对临床指南的认识和使用。
共对 1803 名全科医生进行了抽样,其中 196 名(45 名地区全科医生和 151 名大都市全科医生)作出了回应。不到一半(48%)的地区全科医生报告说,患者在转诊后 2 周内有望接受专科医生的治疗,而大都市全科医生的这一比例为 70%(p=0.001)。大多数大都市全科医生表示,他们会将疑似 HNC 的患者转介给专攻 HNC 的耳鼻喉科(ENT)和普外科医生。区域全科医生在 ENT 和普外科医生之间存在分歧。服务的可及性是影响地区全科医生转诊实践的最常见因素,而对于大都市全科医生来说,这是患者的症状。对政府癌症转诊资源的认识普遍较低。
与大都市全科医生相比,地区全科医生报告说,HNC 患者在最佳时间范围内接受专科医生治疗的可能性较小。受访者报告了早期转诊疑似 HNC 患者的不同障碍,地区全科医生更多地提到系统层面的因素,而大都市全科医生更多地提到患者层面的因素。
评估服务提供和实施方面的社区需求,并解决实施障碍,可能会最大限度地减少不必要的临床差异。