General practitioners experience multi-level barriers to implementing recommended care for hip and knee osteoarthritis: a qualitative study.

IF 2 Q2 MEDICINE, GENERAL & INTERNAL
Alison J Gibbs, Christian J Barton, Nicholas F Taylor, Joanne L Kemp, Jason A Wallis, Jo-Anne Manski-Nankervis, Allison M Ezzat
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Abstract

Background: General practitioners (GPs) play a key role in managing osteoarthritis, including referring to appropriate management services. Physiotherapist-led osteoarthritis management programs and advanced practice triage services are effective, but GPs views on them are largely unknown. This study aimed to explore general practitioner perspectives on: (1) managing patients with hip and knee osteoarthritis, and (2) physiotherapy-led osteoarthritis care and referral pathways.

Methods: Interview topic guides were developed based on the theoretical domains framework. Twenty-five semi-structured interviews with GPs were conducted. All data were coded independently by at least two researchers and analysed inductively using thematic analysis, with barrier themes mapped to the socioecological model.

Results: Two interrelated themes were identified: (i) GPs had good general knowledge of recommended osteoarthritis care, but (ii) they faced multi-level challenges facilitating or directly providing evidence-based care. Nearly all GPs identified exercise as first-line care and surgery as a last resort. Most were aware imaging was not required to diagnose osteoarthritis, yet reported often referring for imaging. Many GPs expressed challenges facilitating patient engagement in physiotherapy due to patient, environmental/social and system level barriers. Key barriers included: perceived patient expectations and lack of motivation to attend physiotherapy, a lack of knowledge of available physiotherapy services, a lack of affordable physiotherapy services, and lengthy waiting times for public orthopaedic appointments. Having private health insurance was perceived as an enabler.

Conclusions: Despite having good knowledge of guideline-recommended care, GPs in our study experienced multi-level barriers to implementing this care in practice. Public health information and strategies to address patient's beliefs and lack of motivation to exercise may help reduce barriers to engaging in appropriate care. Urgent health system funding reforms are needed to allow GPs to appropriately manage patients with hip and knee osteoarthritis.

背景:全科医生(GPs)在管理骨关节炎方面发挥着关键作用,包括将患者转介到适当的管理服务机构。物理治疗师主导的骨关节炎管理项目和高级实践分流服务是有效的,但全科医生对它们的看法大多不为人知。本研究旨在探讨全科医生对以下方面的看法:(方法:方法:根据理论领域框架制定了访谈主题指南。对全科医生进行了 25 次半结构化访谈。所有数据均由至少两名研究人员独立编码,并使用主题分析法进行归纳分析,将障碍主题映射到社会生态模型:结果:确定了两个相互关联的主题:(i)全科医生对推荐的骨关节炎护理具有良好的常识,但(ii)他们在促进或直接提供循证护理方面面临着多层次的挑战。几乎所有全科医生都认为运动是第一线护理,而手术是最后的手段。大多数全科医生都知道骨关节炎的诊断不需要影像学检查,但却表示经常转诊进行影像学检查。由于患者、环境/社会和系统层面的障碍,许多全科医生表示在促进患者参与物理治疗方面面临挑战。主要障碍包括:患者对物理治疗的预期和缺乏积极性、对现有物理治疗服务缺乏了解、缺乏负担得起的物理治疗服务以及公共骨科预约的等候时间过长。拥有私人医疗保险被认为是一个有利因素:结论:在我们的研究中,尽管全科医生对指南推荐的护理有很好的了解,但在实际操作中却遇到了多层次的障碍。公共卫生信息以及针对患者信念和缺乏锻炼动力的策略可能有助于减少参与适当护理的障碍。急需对医疗系统进行资金改革,以使全科医生能够适当管理髋关节和膝关节骨关节炎患者。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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