Underlying motivations hampering Flemish primary care physicians from overcoming the barriers in osteoporosis care : an EMR-facilitated clinical reasoning study

BackgroundOver half of the European population aged minimum 65 years presents with at least two chronic diseases. Attention towards these diseases exhibits disparities, with limited primary care physician (PCP) attention for osteoporosis. This was confirmed in a previous integrated osteoporosis care (IOC) project in which notable difficulties to enlist PCPs arose. Consequently, this study was initiated in Flemish PCPs for in-depth analysis of underlying mechanisms hampering PCPs to fully commit to osteoporosis care.MethodsA qualitative Electronic Medical Record (EMR)-facilitated clinical reaso... Mehr ...

Verfasser: Verdonck, Caroline
Van Daele, Ellis
Willems, Ruben
Borgermans, Liesbeth
Boeckxstaens, Pauline
Dokumenttyp: journalarticle
Erscheinungsdatum: 2023
Verlag/Hrsg.: Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Schlagwörter: Medicine and Health Sciences / Health Policy / Osteoporosis / Qualitative research / Making / Clinical decision / Health priorities / Primary care physicians / Primary care / Multimorbidity
Sprache: Englisch
Permalink: https://search.fid-benelux.de/Record/base-27093992
Datenquelle: BASE; Originalkatalog
Powered By: BASE
Link(s) : https://biblio.ugent.be/publication/01HHXZVQT3C2G5D82418EZ6ZSA

BackgroundOver half of the European population aged minimum 65 years presents with at least two chronic diseases. Attention towards these diseases exhibits disparities, with limited primary care physician (PCP) attention for osteoporosis. This was confirmed in a previous integrated osteoporosis care (IOC) project in which notable difficulties to enlist PCPs arose. Consequently, this study was initiated in Flemish PCPs for in-depth analysis of underlying mechanisms hampering PCPs to fully commit to osteoporosis care.MethodsA qualitative Electronic Medical Record (EMR)-facilitated clinical reasoning study was conducted. A semi-structured interview guide was employed to guide PCPs from reflections on their own patients to broader views regarding osteoporosis care. An inductive thematic analysis was performed using NVivo 12.ResultsThirteen PCPs were interviewed. They stated that osteoporosis patients often had complex (medical) profiles. PCPs emphasised the ongoing necessity for prioritisation within this context. This leads to a competition for PCP attention during consultations at three levels: i. between acute versus preventive care; ii. between primary fracture prevention and other preventive services and iii. between secondary fracture prevention and other preventive services; spanning eight areas of competition: disease significance, perceived impact, PCP awareness, the patient agenda, PCP competence, PCP support, perceived patient burden, and efficiency of care provision. Applicability of these areas of competition differed between levels.ConclusionThe intricate context in which PCPs operate, creates a competition for PCP attention leading to a lack of attention for fracture prevention. To preserve efforts in fracture prevention, areas of competition should be systematically addressed.Trial registrationApproval for the study has been provided by the Ghent University Hospital Ethics Committee (BC-09797).