| Literature DB >> 28086887 |
Gemma Mas Dalmau1, Elisenda Sant Arderiu2, María Belén Enfedaque Montes3, Ivan Solà4,5, Sandra Pequeño Saco4, Pablo Alonso Coello4,5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Oral anticoagulant therapy reduces the risk of stroke in patients with atrial fibrillation, but many patients are still not prescribed this therapy. The causes of underuse of vitamin K antagonists oral anticoagulants are not clear but could be related, in part, to patients' and physicians' perceptions and attitudes towards the benefits and downsides of this treatment. The purpose of this systematic review was to evaluate and synthesize patients' and physicians' perceptions and attitudes towards the benefits and downsides of vitamin K antagonist, in order to explore potential factors related with its underuse.Entities:
Keywords: Atrial fibrillation; Attitudes; Oral-anticoagulation therapy; Patients; Perceptions; Physicians; Qualitative Research; Systematic Review
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28086887 PMCID: PMC5234257 DOI: 10.1186/s12875-016-0574-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Fam Pract ISSN: 1471-2296 Impact factor: 2.497
Characteristics of included studies
| Country | Methodological approach | Technique | Analysis | Quality assessment | Participants | Number (only physicians or patients) | Sex | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Howitt et al. 1999 [ | United Kingdom | Mixed: quantitative and qualitative | Structured interviews (information through email) | Thematic analysis (information through email) | moderate | -Patients | 56 | 28 men/28 women (information through email) |
| Fuller et al. 2004 [ | United Kingdom | Mixed: quantitative and qualitative | Questionnaire and interviews | Content analysis | moderate | -Patients | 76 | |
| Wild et al. 2004 [ | United States,, United Kingdom and Spain | Qualitative | Semi-structured interview | Interpretative. | moderate | -Patients | 60 | |
| Coelho Dantas et al.2004 [ | Canada | Qualitative | Semi-structured Interview. | Interpretative. Thematic analysis (information through email). Grounded theory. | excellent | -Patients | 21 | 12 men/9 women |
| Bajorek et al. 2007, 2009 [ | Australia | Qualitative: Phenomenology | Focus groups | Thematic analysis | excellent | -Physicians | 20 | 12 men/8 women |
| [Geriatricians, Cardiologists, General medicine (consultants or registrars),General Practice] | (6 Geriatric | |||||||
| -Patients | 14 | |||||||
| -Carers | ||||||||
| Solà et al. 2009 [ | Spain | Mixed: quantitative and qualitative | Focus groups | Content analysis | excellent | Physicians | 23 (15 General Practice, | 12 men/11 women |
| Patients | 23 | 15 men/8 women | ||||||
| Lipman et al. 2004 [ | United Kingdom | Qualitative | Semi-structured Interview. | Framework method | excellent | -Physicians | 11 | 9 men/2 women |
| Anderson et al. 2006 [ | United Kingdom | Mixed: quantitative and qualitative | Questionnaire and semi-structured interview | Interpretative. Grounded theory. | moderate | -Physicians | 14 | |
| [Cardiologists, Geriatric or general medicine (consultants or Specialist Registrars)] | 5 Cardiologists, | |||||||
| Decker et al. 2012 [ | United States | Qualitative | Semi-structured Interview. | Content analysis | moderate | -Physicians | 23 |
Fig. 1PRISMA Flowchart
Fig. 2Emerging themes
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Patient’s quotations
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Main themes are captured in bold