| Literature DB >> 19296843 |
Suzanne K Linder1, Sarah T Hawley, Crystale P Cooper, Lawrence E Scholl, Maria Jibaja-Weiss, Robert J Volk.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Professional medical organizations recommend individualized patient decision making about prostate cancer screening. Little is known about primary care physicians' use of pre-screening discussions to promote informed decision making for prostate cancer screening. The aim of this study is to explore physicians' use of pre-screening discussions and reasons why physicians would or would not try to persuade patients to be screened if they initially refuse testing.Entities:
Mesh:
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Year: 2009 PMID: 19296843 PMCID: PMC2666644 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2296-10-19
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Fam Pract ISSN: 1471-2296 Impact factor: 2.497
Figure 1Physicians who would persuade men to have the PSA test after initial refusal.
Figure 2Reported frequency of ordering PSA tests by physician practice style.
Responses to question about persuading a patient to be screened who refuses the PSA test.±*
| "Because prostate cancer found early is curable." | "The patient is the ultimate decision maker." |
| "How else could you be diagnosed and treated?" | "The patient has the final say in his care." |
| "Patient has the right to refuse after the discussion of the benefit and risk of PSA screening." | |
| "Because prostate cancer could be asymptomatic." | "No good evidence that screening prevents morbidity & mortality." |
| "I have a number of asymptomatic patients with increased PSA. Therefore, prostate cancer." | |
| "Relatively low number false positives." | "The test is not specific enough to recommend without reservation in low risk people." |
| "Personally I believe in the benefit." | "Test has too many false positives." |
| "Usually doing other lab work – one more tube if positive then he can consider further evaluation if desired." | "Too time intensive." |
| "The complications of biopsy and treatment might outweigh the benefit." |
± Data from a university-based family medicine clinic and six community health centers in Houston, TX collected in February 2004.
*One response missing.
Reported physician screening practice for high risk men, by physician practice style.*
| Physician Practice Style | ||||
| Order PSA without discussion | Discuss, recommend PSA | Discuss, let patient decide | ||
| Are your prostate cancer screening practices different for African American Men? | ||||
| No difference in screening practice | 46.2% (6) | 35.0% (7) | 28.0% (7) | 0.54 |
| More likely to screen | 53.8% (7) | 65.5% (13) | 72.0% (18) | |
| Are your prostate cancer screening practices different for men with a family history of prostate cancer? | ||||
| No difference in screening practice | 50.0% (7) | 20.0% (4) | 3.7% (1) | 0.01 |
| More likely to screen | 50.0% (7) | 80.0% (16) | 96.3% (26) | |
P-values from Chi-square test. Sample size for each cell given in parentheses.
* Data from a university-based family medicine clinic and six community health centers in Houston, Texas collected in February 2004.