| Literature DB >> 25938509 |
Patricia Moreno-Peral1, Sonia Conejo-Cerón1, Ana Fernández2, Anna Berenguera3, María Martínez-Andrés4, Mariona Pons-Vigués5, Emma Motrico6, Beatriz Rodríguez-Martín4, Juan A Bellón7, Maria Rubio-Valera8.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Primary care (PC) patients have difficulties in committing to and incorporating primary prevention and health promotion (PP&HP) activities into their long-term care. We aimed to re-interpret, for the first time, qualitative findings regarding factors affecting PC patients' acceptance of PP&HP activities. METHODS ANDEntities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 25938509 PMCID: PMC4418671 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0125004
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Translation and synthesis of data from original papers.
Fig 2Flow-chart of the systematic review.
Study characteristics.
| Study | Fieldwork year | Country | Participants | Age range | Number of females (%) | Data collection technique | Aim (using original study wording) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Bellón 2014 [ | 2009 | Spain | 52 | 18–75 | 27 (52%) | Focus groups | To explore patients’ opinions towards receiving information about their risk for depression and the values and criteria upon which their opinions are based. |
| 2 | Costello 2013 [ | _ | USA | 31 | ≥60 | 11 (35%) | Focus groups | To explore the perceptions of independent living older adults regarding their physicians' role in promoting physical activity. |
| 3 | Elwell 2013 [ | _ | UK | 7 | 40–74 | 5 (71%) | Focus groups | To examine patients and health professionals perspectives on lifestyle behaviour change and to inform the development of a lifestyle behaviour change intervention to be used in primary care. |
| 4 | Lu 2013 [ | 2012 | Australia | 18 | 40–69 | 11 (61%) | Semi-structured telephone interviews | To explore patients’ views on risk, assessment and their general practitioner’s role, and how these factors may impact their uptake of preventive care. |
| 5 | Calderon 2011 [ | 2006 | Spain | 15 | 45–80 | 7 (47%) | Discussion groups | To gain an in-depth understanding of general practitioners’ and patients’ perceptions abouthealth promotion and prevention in primary health care, and to define the areas that could be improved in future interventions. |
| 6 | Dhanapalaratnam 2011 [ | _ | Australia | 20 | 50–69 | 12 (60%) | Semi-structured telephone interviews | To explore the factors contributing to sustain or no sustain behaviour change following a lifestyle intervention in general practice. |
| 7 | Gale 2011 [ | 2003 | UK | 17 | 40–79 | 2 (12%) | Interviews | To identify and explore the attitudes of patients and general practitioners towards preventative medication for cardiovascular disease after they have received information about it; to identify implications for practice and prescribing. |
| 8 | Ingram 2011 [ | 2007 | USA | 33 | 44–69 | 33 (100%) | Focus groups | To elicit recollections of the women’s outcome expectations and the barriers they experienced; to obtain feedback on all of the physical activity program components (walking prescription, workshops, tailored telephone contacts), and seek suggestions for changes to make the program more appealing to Afro-American women. |
| 9 | Mazza 2011 [ | 2010 | Australia | 85 | >25 | 41 (48%) | Focus groups | To identify barriers to, and enablers of, the uptake of preventive care in general practice from the perspective of community members, and to explore their sense of the effectiveness of that care. |
| 10 | Walseth 2011 [ | _ | Norway | 12 | teenage-60 | 5 (42%) | Qualitative observation and interview | To elucidate the relevance of Habermas’s theory as a practical deliberation procedure in lifestyle counselling in general practice, using a patient perspective; and to search for topics which patients consider of significance in such consultations. |
| 11 | Costa 2010 [ | 2009 | Brazil | _ | _ | _ | Semi-structured interviews | To identify the users' perception of group-experienced health promotion practices in a family health basic unit. |
| 12 | Horne 2010 [ | 2009 | UK | 127 | 60–70 | 81 (64%) | Focus groups and depth semi-structured interviews | To explore the influence of primary health care professionals in increasing exercise and physical activity among 60–70-year-old White and South Asian community dwellers. |
| 13 | O’Sulivan 2010 [ | _ | Canada | 15 | 32–65 | 11 (73%) | Individual, semi-structured interviews (each participant took part in three interviews) | To understand why the Physical Activity Counseling intervention worked and the patient perspective of the counseling. Also, to explore the experiences, thoughts, and feelings of the patients who received both the brief and intensive arms of the counseling intervention. |
| 14 | Wolf 2010 [ | _ | USA | 234 | 30–70 | 117 (50%) | Focus groups | (i) What are the barriers that people with different information-seeking orientations have in receiving healthy lifestyle and disease prevention messages in the primary care setting? (ii) where are the windows of opportunity for prevention counseling during the office visit and do these differ by information-seeking styles? And (iii) what are the desired aspects of prevention counseling that people hope to receive from their healthcare provider? |
| 15 | Figueira 2009 [ | 2007 | Brazil | 20 | 18–37 | 20 (100%) | Semi-structured interviews | To analyze perceptions and participation of female users of basic health units with regard to disease prevention and health promotion |
| 16 | Kehler_a 2008 [ | _ | Denmark | 12 | 42–74 | 2 (17%) | Individual interviews | To explore and describe motivational aspects related to potential lifestyle changes among patients at increased risk of cardiovascular disease following preventive consultations in general practice. |
| 17 | Kehler_b 2008 [ | _ | Denmark | 12 | 42–74 | 2 (17%) | Individual interviews | To explore and analyze experiences of preventive consultations in patients at high cardiovascular risk. |
| 18 | Elley 2007 [ | 2003 | New Zealand | 15 | 43–78 | 9 (60%) | Semi-structured telephone interviews | To explore attitudes and subjective experiences of those who received an intervention of physical activity promotion. |
| 19 | Goldman 2006 [ | 2003 | USA | 50 | 27–84 | 21 (42%) | Focus groups | To explore patients’ perceptions of cholesterol and cardiovascular disease risk and their reactions to 3 strategies for communicating cardiovascular disease risk. |
| 20 | Lundqvist 2006 [ | _ | Sweden | 9 | 47–70 | 9 (100%) | Interviews | To examine attitudes and barriers to smoking cessation among middle aged and elderly women. |
| 21 | Ribera 2006 [ | 2001 | Spain | 20 | 28–48 | 17 (85%) | Focus groups, semi-standardized individual interviews and short individual interviews | To explore experience-based information and generate explanations for the lack of micro-level integration of promoting physical activity in general practices of Barcelona. |
| 22 | Bowden 2004 [ | 2001–2002 | USA | 74 | 21–83 | 63 (85%) | Focus groups | To report the results of an intervention program to help rural adults change their health risk behaviours and to describe the barriers to behavioural change in the rural environment, as expressed by rural adults in focus group discussions. |
| 23 | Stermer 2004 [ | 2002 | UK | 18 | _ | _ | Focus groups | To explore the views and opinions of patients with a family history of colorectal cancer, and of primary and secondary care health professionals, on how to improve current services for individuals with a family history of colorectal cancer. |
| 24 | Van Steenkiste 2004 [ | _ | Netherlands | 22 | 40–70 | 5 (23%) | Semi-structured interviews | To explore those barriers that impede effective communication on cardiovascular risk and prevention during consultations in primary care. |
| 25 | Fuller 2003 [ | _ | UK (Scotland) | 30 | _ | 15 (50%) | Semi-structured interviews | To investigate the views of general practitioners and their patients about healthy eating and the provision of healthy eating advice in general practice. |
| 26 | Butler 1998 [ | _ | UK (Wales) | 42 | ≥20 | 24 (57%) | Semi-structured interviews | To determine the effectiveness and acceptability of general practitioners' opportunistic antismoking interventions by examining detailed accounts of smokers' experiences of these. |
| 27 | Dilloway 1998 [ | _ | UK | 19 | 20–60 | 19 (100%) | Semi-structured interviews | To examine female patients' concerns and experiences in relation to a number of sexual health promotion issues. |
| 28 | Cogswell 1993 [ | 1984–1986 | USA | 322 | ≥18 | 193 (60%) | Focus groups | To explore health care consumers’ perspectives on provision of preventive care by physicians. |
| 29 | Stott 1990 [ | 1987 | UK (Wales) | 130 | 25–40 | 130 (100%) | Semi-structured interviews | To explore the women´s view in the role that the primary care team could and should play in health promotion. To compare quantitative and qualitative data. |
Fig 3Ecological model of the factors affecting the implementation of PP&HP activities by primary care patients.
Translation of 1st and 2nd order constructs and interpretation through 3rd order constructs and sources.
| 3rd order FACTORS | 3rd order constructs | 2nd order constructs (translated) | Sources |
|---|---|---|---|
| INTRAPERSONAL factors | Beliefs/Attitudes | Risk is out of (within) patient control (External/Internal locus of control). Prevention is (not) patients' responsibility | 5,24,26,32,33,36,38,43,44,47 |
| PP&HP is only necessary in high risk patients (genetic inheritance or family history or those with concomitant risk factors) or when there is a perception of symptoms that affect patients' health | 6, 8, 26, 40 | ||
| PP&HP is a passing trend | 38 | ||
| Some unhealthy lifestyles favor mental health ("Everyone deserves to indulge occasionally") | 6 | ||
| It does not makes sense in the elderly (it is too late) | 5 | ||
| Fear of side effects of PP&HP (side effects of statins, potential injuries when doing physical activity, etc.) | 13, 14 | ||
| There are exceptions to the rule (i.e. giving examples of people following unhealthy habits with no negative consequences for their health) | 27, 43 | ||
| Comorbid physical and mental illnesses hamper the adoption of lifestyle changes | 26, 28, 29, 35, 37 | ||
| Knowing risk is only necessary/interesting if there is a treatment to prevent the disease | 24 | ||
| "Ostrich strategy" (The patient prefers not to know about risk) | 24, 33, 38, 43 | ||
| Lack of trust in risk factors as predictors of disease. Lack of trust in the effectiveness of PP&HP activities in preventing disease. | 13, 24, 27, 35, 38, 43 | ||
| Empirical evidence of risk (e.g., test showing deviated blood markers) | 26, 43 | ||
| Knowledge | Positive (and negative) consequences of (un)healthy habits (e.g., smoking, physical activity, etc.) | 26, 27, 37–41, 43, 44, 46 | |
| (Lack of) knowledge about what lifestyle changes to make and how, and where to find guidance and advice | 14, 35, 36, 38, 40, 41 | ||
| Skills | Patients' ability to find information on PP&HP activities | 47 | |
| Capacity to understand risk indicators | 38, 43 | ||
| (In)ability to remember professionals' advice | 43 | ||
| Self-concept | Self-esteem, self-efficacy and self-confidence | 5, 28, 31, 32, 34, 37, 39, 41 | |
| Motivation | (Lack of) motivation and interest | 5, 13, 14, 26, 27, 31, 32, 36, 39, 40, 43 | |
| Aspects that improve motivation (threat of potential disease, patients' guilt, perception of quick improvements when making a lifestyle change) | 26, 27, 37, 44, | ||
| Positive reinforcement of unhealthy habits | 34, 36 | ||
| Difficulties in maintaining lifestyle changes over time | 26 | ||
| Resources | Patients' lack of time (workload and/or family commitments) | 5,8, 26, 28, 29, 32–35, 37, 41 | |
| Lack of financial resources (cost of PP&HP activities) | 8, 26, 32–34, 41 | ||
| INTERPERSONAL | PC professionals (and other PC staff) | (Lack of) trust in provider (training, motivation, attitude, knowledge about available resources, communication skills) and care provision characteristics (instilling fear, inadequate treatment or support, contradictory messages) | 5, 6, 8, 13, 14, 24–28, 30,32, 33, 36–42, 44–47 |
| Importance given by PC professionals to PP&HP in the elderly | 14 | ||
| Judgmental professionals as an invasion of patients' independence | 45 | ||
| Advice as an invasion of patients' privacy (the professional nags the patient; trotting out usual advice and preaching) | 6, 27, 44 | ||
| Limited influence (PC professionals' interventions are simple tips and/or ineffective, what they can do is insufficient) | 27, 32, 44 | ||
| Good patient-PC professional relationship | 8, 27, 30, 32, 36, 47 | ||
| Patient-centered care (advice adapted to patient’s circumstances, personalized care) and shared decision-making | 5, 13, 24, 26, 27, 32 | ||
| The patient makes a commitment with the professional to reach agreed health goals | 30 | ||
| Biomedical model (Risk is not a disease, the GPs should focus on diagnosis and treatment) | 6 | ||
| PP&HP is the responsibility of PC professionals (must provide information on which PP&HP activities to perform and how do them) | 43 | ||
| PC professional has a lot of burden, they are too busy | 6, 8, 13, 31, 42, 45, 47 | ||
| Tools to facilitate the communication of risk and patient education and as an excuse to initiate patient evaluation of risk | 38, 45 | ||
| Use of communication technology (email, sms, etc) to send reminders and support messages | 14 | ||
| (Lack of) Reminders, follow-up visits and assessment of results | 5, 14, 28, 32 | ||
| Other professionals and specialists | Support from specialists and professionals in specific activities (e.g., nutritionist or physical trainer) | 14, 29, 32, 36, 37, 39 | |
| Family and friends | Social support and support from peers | 8, 14, 24, 28, 34, 41 | |
| Pets entail commitment to perform physical activity | 37 | ||
| INSTITUTIONAL | Organization of physicians' practice | Waiting lists | 33 |
| Professionals’ lack of time | 5, 8, 13, 30, 31, 36, 47 | ||
| (Lack of) resources for treatment, follow-up and referral (support groups, nutritionists, prescribing exercise) | 14, 27, 29, 31–33, 36, 39 | ||
| System interests/goals | Private and public health institutions do not promote or cover PP&HP because it is unprofitable | 14, 31, 33, 39–41, 46 | |
| PC health centers are (not) an adequate reference point for PP&HP | 34, 42 | ||
| ENVIRONMENT AND SOCIETY | Physical context | Built environment (e.g., bike lanes, parks or pedestrian paths) | 29, 39, 41 |
| Cultural context | Dietary traditions and other cultural lifestyle habits | 27, 29, 39, 41 | |
| Social norms that incentivize (un)healthy habits | 27, 28 | ||
| Social stigma of unhealthy habits (e.g., alcohol consumption, promotion of sexual health, etc.) | 27, 45 | ||
| Mass media impact | 6, 38, 42, 46 | ||
| Lack of focus on PP&HP in health professionals’ university training | 31, 40 | ||
| Socio-economic context | Lack of public policies that promote PP&HP | 6, 8, 40, 42, 46 | |
| Lack of work/personal-life balance | 33 |
Practical implications of the synthesis results of the synthesis.
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| Curriculum infusion and/or health education |
| Patient empowerment and training in PP&HP activities |
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| Promote good patient-physician relationships (patient-centered care and shared decision-making) |
| Training in communication skills and PP&HP activities |
| Contextualized care (use of community, social and family resources) |
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| Increased consultation time per patient and PC professional training |
| Use of tools to contact, motivate and follow-up patients |
| Promotion of integrated collaborative care (Primary care professionals, specialists and community stakeholders) |
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| Mass media campaigns to promote healthy lifestyles |
| Build environment policies (e.g., access to green areas or public gym’s) |
| Policies that promote work/personal-life balance and diminish health inequalities |
| Health education of public and professionals in schools and universities |
PC = Primary care; PP&HP = Primary Prevention and Health Promotion