| Literature DB >> 26503396 |
Domenica Coxon1, Martin Frisher2, Clare Jinks3, Kelvin Jordan3, Zoe Paskins3, George Peat3.
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: Some patients spend years with painful osteoarthritis without consulting for it, including times when they are experiencing persistent severe pain and disability. Beliefs about osteoarthritis and what primary care has to offer may influence the decision to consult but their relative importance has seldom been quantified. We sought to investigate the relative importance of perceived service-related and clinical need attributes in the decision to consult a primary care physician for painful osteoarthritis.Entities:
Keywords: PRIMARY CARE; osteoarthritis
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26503396 PMCID: PMC4636673 DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2015-009625
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Open ISSN: 2044-6055 Impact factor: 2.692
Attributes and levels included in choice tasks
| Attributes | Levels | |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Pain characteristics | You are experiencing a dull aching pain, which is there most of the time |
| You are experiencing short episodes of more severe, often unpredictable pain | ||
| 2 | Level of disruption to everyday life | The pain is not disrupting your everyday life |
| The pain is disrupting some of your everyday life | ||
| The pain is disrupting most of your everyday life | ||
| 3 | Comorbidity | You are experiencing no other physical health problems |
| You are experiencing other minor physical health problems | ||
| You are experiencing other major physical health problems | ||
| 4 | Assessment | The GP asks about your symptoms and their effect on your day-to-day life |
| The GP conducts a thorough physical examination of the joints as well as asks about your symptoms and their effect on your day-to-day life | ||
| The GP investigates with appropriate X-rays and blood tests as well as asks about your symptoms and their effect on your day-to-day life and conducts a thorough physical examination of the joints | ||
| 5 | Management | The GP prescribes pain relief and gives verbal advice about your condition |
| The GP prescribes pain relief, gives written advice about your condition and arranges follow-up with a practice nurse and physiotherapy referral | ||
| The GP offers a promising new treatment as well as prescribing pain relief, giving written advice about your condition and arranging follow-up with a practice nurse and physiotherapy referral | ||
| 6 | GP attitude | The GP regards your joint pain as part of the normal ageing process that one just has to accept |
| The GP regards your joint pain as a legitimate health problem that requires treatment | ||
GP, general practitioner.
Figure 1Sample page in the questionnaire showing the choice task format. GP, general practitioner.
Descriptive characteristics of respondents
| Respondents (n=863) | |
|---|---|
| Age (years) | |
| 50–64 | 245 (28) |
| 65–74 | 367 (43) |
| 75+ | 251 (29) |
| Female | 478 (55) |
| Lives alone | 185 (21) |
| Currently in full-time or part-time paid employment | 196 (24) |
| Occupational class* | |
| Higher managerial, administrative and professional occupations | 203 (25) |
| Intermediate occupations | 190 (23) |
| Routine and manual occupations | 418 (52) |
| Perceived financial strain: ‘quite comfortably off’† | 150 (17) |
| Self-rated health: fair/poor | 224 (26) |
| Number of self-reported comorbidities (0–22): median (IQR) | 4 (2, 6) |
| HADS (0–21): median (IQR) | |
| Anxiety | 5 (2.5, 8) |
| Depression | 3 (1, 6) |
| Hip pain in past 12 months | 483 (56) |
| Knee pain in past 12 months | 633 (73) |
| Hand pain in past 12 months | 589 (68) |
| Time since onset of joint problem (years) | |
| <1 | 32 (4) |
| 1–5 | 243 (28) |
| 6–10 | 241 (28) |
| >10 | 336 (39) |
| Never consulted GP for joint problem | 141 (16) |
| Consulted GP for joint problem in past 12 months | 434 (50) |
Figures are numbers (percentage) of respondents unless otherwise stated.
*Standard occupational classification based on current/last job title.71 72
†From Thomas.70
GP, general practitioner; HADS, Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale.69
Perceived importance of attributes and levels from choice tasks
| Attributes and levels | Number of times selected/number of times presented (%) | Standardised utility (β) (95% CI) | Attribute utility range | Attribute importance scores (%)* | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. Pain characteristics | |||||
| Dull ache | 2040/4315 (47) | −0.08 (−0.114 to −0.048) | 0.16 | 5 | |
| Severe unpredictable episodes | 2275/4315 (53) | 0.08 (0.048 to 0.114) | |||
| 2. Level of disruption to everyday life | |||||
| None | 835/2840 (29) | −0.65 (−0.706 to −0.590) | 1.10 | 31 | |
| Some | 1590/2859 (56) | 0.20 (0.147 to 0.255) | |||
| Most | 1892/2931 (65) | 0.45 (0.392 to 0.502) | |||
| 3. Comorbidity | |||||
| None | 1275/2944 (43) | −0.22 (−0.276 to −0.169) | 0.46 | 13 | |
| Minor | 1390/2836 (49) | −0.01 (−0.065 to 0.044) | |||
| Major | 1651/2850 (58) | 0.23 (0.179 to 0.287) | |||
| 4. Assessment | |||||
| Asks about symptoms and impact | 1136/2853 (40) | −0.27 (−0.328 to −0.219) | 0.48 | 14 | |
| As above plus thorough physical examination | 1507/2842 (53) | 0.06 (0.007 to 0.117) | |||
| As above, appropriate X-rays /bloods | 1678/2935 (57) | 0.21 (0.157 to 0.265) | |||
| 5. Management | |||||
| Pain relief, verbal advice | 1178/2930 (40) | −0.26 (−0.312 to −0.208) | 0.45 | 13 | |
| Pain relief, written advice, PN f/up, PT referral | 1530/2858 (54) | 0.07 (0.012 to 0.120) | |||
| Pain relief, written advice, PN follow-up, PT referral, promising new treatment | 1609/2842 (57) | 0.19 (0.141 to 0.247) | |||
| 6. GP attitude | |||||
| Normal ageing, accept it | 1360/4315 (32) | −0.43 (−0.466 to −0.397) | 0.86 | 24 | |
| Legitimate problem, requires treatment | 2955/4315 (68) | 0.43 (0.397 to 0.466) | |||
*Attribute utility range/sum total of attribute utility ranges.
GP, general practitioner; PN f/up, practice nurse follow-up; PT physiotherapy.
Paired analysis to evaluate specific hypotheses
| Profile | Attributes and levels | Total utility | Probability of choosing profile* (%) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Scenario 1: | |||
| A | The pain is disrupting most of your everyday life | 0.02 | 35 |
| B | The pain is disrupting some of your everyday life | 0.63 | 65 |
| Scenario 2: Trade-off between available primary care assessment and management options vs perceived GP attitude | |||
| A | The GP investigates with appropriate X-rays and blood tests as well as asks about your symptoms and their effect on your day-to-day life and conducts a thorough physical examination of the joints | −0.03 | 52 |
| B | The GP asks about your symptoms and their effect on your day-to-day life | −0.10 | 48 |
*Within each pairwise scenario, the probability of choosing a profile (A or B) as the one under which they would be more likely to consult the GP (all else being equal). Calculated as the exponentiated total utility/sum total of exponentiated utilities.
GP, general practitioner.