Research Unit for General Practice, Aarhus C, Denmark.
Department of Clinical Medicine, Aarhus University, Aarhus C, Denmark.
Scand J Prim Health Care. 2024 Mar;42(1):156-169. doi: 10.1080/02813432.2023.2296944. Epub 2024 Feb 7.
Patients with psychiatric disorders are at risk of experiencing suboptimal cancer diagnostics and treatment. This study investigates how this patient group perceives the cancer diagnostic process in general practice.
Cross-sectional study using questionnaire and register data.
General practice in Denmark.
Patients diagnosed with cancer in late 2016 completed a questionnaire about their experiences with their general practitioner (GP) in the cancer diagnostic process ( = 3411). Information on pre-existing psychiatric disorders was obtained from register data on psychiatric hospital contacts and primary care treated psychiatric disorders through psychotropic medications. Logistic regression was used to analyse the association between psychiatric disorders and the patients' experiences.
Patients' experiences, including cancer worry, feeling being taken seriously, and the perceived time between booking an appointment and the first GP consultation.[Box: see text].
A total of 13% of patients had an indication of a psychiatric disorder. This group more often perceived the time interval as too short between the first booking of a consultation and the first GP consultation. Patients with primary care treated psychiatric disorders were more likely to worry about cancer at the first presentation and to share this concern with their GP compared with patients without psychiatric disorders. We observed no statistically significant association between patients with psychiatric disorders and perceiving the waiting time to referral from general practice, being taken seriously, trust in the GP's abilities, and the patients' knowledge of the process following the GP referral.
The patients' experiences with the cancer diagnostic process in general practice did not vary largely between patients with and without psychiatric disorders. Worrying about cancer may be a particular concern for patients with primary care treated psychiatric disorders.
精神障碍患者在癌症诊断和治疗方面存在不尽人意的风险。本研究调查了该患者群体对一般实践中癌症诊断过程的总体看法。
使用问卷和登记数据的横断面研究。
丹麦的一般实践。
2016 年末被诊断患有癌症的患者完成了一份关于他们在癌症诊断过程中与全科医生(GP)的经历的问卷( = 3411)。关于先前存在的精神障碍的信息是从关于精神科医院接触的登记数据和通过精神药物治疗的初级保健治疗的精神障碍获得的。使用逻辑回归分析精神障碍与患者经历之间的关联。
患者的经历,包括对癌症的担忧、感到被认真对待,以及预约和首次 GP 咨询之间的时间间隔[方框:见文本]。
共有 13%的患者存在精神障碍的迹象。这组患者在第一次预约和第一次 GP 咨询之间的时间间隔过短的情况更为常见。与没有精神障碍的患者相比,接受初级保健治疗的精神障碍患者在首次就诊时更有可能担心癌症,并与他们的 GP 分享这种担忧。我们没有观察到有精神障碍的患者与从一般实践转介的等待时间、被认真对待、对 GP 能力的信任以及患者对 GP 转介后流程的了解之间存在统计学上显著的关联。
精神障碍患者和没有精神障碍患者在一般实践中的癌症诊断过程中的经历差异不大。对癌症的担忧可能是接受初级保健治疗的精神障碍患者的一个特别关注问题。