| Literature DB >> 28784088 |
Rahul Alam1, Sudeh Cheraghi-Sohi2, Maria Panagioti1, Aneez Esmail1, Stephen Campbell1,3, Efharis Panagopoulou4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Diagnostic uncertainty is one of the largest contributory factors to the occurrence of diagnostic errors across most specialties in medicine and arguably uncertainty is greatest in primary care due to the undifferentiated symptoms primary care physicians are often presented with. Physicians can respond to diagnostic uncertainty in various ways through the interplay of a series of cognitive, emotional and ethical reactions. The consequences of such uncertainty however can impact negatively upon the primary care practitioner, their patients and the wider healthcare system. Understanding the nature of the existing empirical literature in relation to managing diagnostic uncertainty in primary medical care is a logical and necessary first step in order to understand what solutions are already available and/or to aid the development of any training or feedback aimed at better managing this uncertainty. This review is the first to characterize the existing empirical literature on managing diagnostic uncertainty in primary care.Entities:
Keywords: Burnout; Diagnosis; Primary medical care; Training; Uncertainty
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28784088 PMCID: PMC5545872 DOI: 10.1186/s12875-017-0650-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Fam Pract ISSN: 1471-2296 Impact factor: 2.497
Fig. 1PRISMA flow diagram
Traits, strategies and skills influencing and impacting on managing uncertainty: Quantitative cross-sectional studies
| Author | Study type | Specialty or condition/clinician grade or experience | Setting/ recruitment/ Sample size (n) and response rate (RR %) | Uncertainty assessment | Uncertainty Resource | Uncertainty type | Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cooke 2013 Australia [ | Cross-sectional survey | General practice / Registrar | Survey participants recruited from advertisements and through training events; | Intolerance of uncertainty scale −12 (IUS-12) | Resilience | General intolerance of uncertainty | Lower resilience was associated with lower tolerance of uncertainty. |
| Evans | Cross sectional survey | Pediatrics, family medicine and internal medicine/ Board certified and resident physicians in primary care with a mixture of experience levels | Primary care / Survey participants recruited from an academic medical centre ( | Physicians Belief Scale −32 (PBS), Physician reactions to uncertainty Scale – 8 (PRUS) | Cognitive beliefs | Conceptual uncertainty – difficulties applying abstract criteria to concrete situations (C) | Physicians adopting a biopsychosocial epistemology model were associated with less stress reactions to uncertainty while a biomedical model was associated with more stress reactions to uncertainty. Clinician gender, specialty area and experience were correlated with stress reactions to uncertainty. |
| Nevalainen | Questionnaire-based survey (self-assessment) | Primary Care/Recently qualified GPs (<5 years, mean age 31.2 years) and experienced GPs (>5 years, mean age 48.4 years) | Convenience sample of GPs recruited via email. | Custom made questionnaire | Experience | Access to information sources (C) | Experienced GPs better tolerate uncertainty (53.8% (95% CI; 42.2–65.0) in medical decision-making than their younger colleagues (25.9% (95% CI; 17.0–36.5) ( |
| Portnoy, 2011 | Cross-sectional survey-representative sample | Mixed –Family practice, internists, pediatrics, obstetrics and gynecology / Mixed 13.9 years practicing (SD ± 7.5) | Primary care; | Ambiguity aversion (AA) in medicine scale. | Factors influencing physicians’ attitudes towards the communication and management of scientific uncertainty in clinical practice | Physicians’ attitudes about communicating and managing uncertainty and their perceptions of negative reactions to uncertainty by their patients (Eth) | Physician demographics (including medical specialty, ethnicity and gender) predicted attitudes towards communicating and managing scientific uncertainty. |
| Schneider 2010 | Survey – questionnaire (development consisting of focus groups) | General Practice / Overall experience as a doctor –mean years =22.7, experience as a GP, 15.4 years | University hospital conference & 23 “quality circles” (GP groups). Responders | Developing the Dealing with uncertainty questionnaire (DUQ); GP diagnostic action scale and GP diagnostic reasoning scale. | Cognitive heuristics | Dealing with diagnostic uncertainty and heuristics in diagnostic thinking (C) Tolerance of uncertainty (E) | The use of test of time, knowledge of family situation and occupational situation as a simple heuristic. |
| Schneider 2014 | Mixed methods study (focus groups and cross sectional survey) | Primary care, generic conditions/ clinical experience 23.9 years (SD ± 23.9 years) | Development - 10 experienced GPs and survey - | Communicating and dealing with uncertainty questionnaire (CoDU), Physician reaction to Uncertainty (PRU), and Big Five Inventory (BFI-K) | Personality traits of GPs in relation to decision making concerning uncertainty management | Diagnostic action (C) | GPs scoring high in neuroticism demonstrated more anxiety due to uncertainty and higher reluctance to communicate with patients. Extraversion, conscientiousness and openness correlated negatively with anxiety due to uncertainty and positively with patient communication. |
RR Response rate, SP Standardized patients NA not applicable, NS not stated, C Cognitive, E emotional, Eth ethical
Traits, strategies and skills influencing and impacting on managing uncertainty: Qualitative studies
| Author | Study type | Specialty or condition/clinician grade or experience | Setting/ recruitment/ Sample size (n) | Uncertainty assessment | Uncertainty Resource | Uncertainty type | Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Griffiths 2005 | Qualitative study | Hormone replacement therapy, bone densitometry and breast screening/Practice nurses, general practitioners, consultants, specialist registrars, specialist nurse, radiographer | 7 general practices, 3 secondary care clinics ( | Constant comparative analysis of audio recorded transcripts | Strategies health professionals use | Utilizing safety netting techniques (C) | Three key strategies were identified: 1) Focus on certainty for now and this test; 2) providing a coherent account of the medical evidence for the risks and benefits (blurring the uncertainty); and 3) acknowledging inherent uncertainty of medical evidence and negotiating a provisional decision. |
| Hewson 1996 | Process evaluation | Primary and secondary care/a range of clinical experiences (1st year residents to faculty physicians) | Primary and secondary care. 10 tapes of 9 physicians interacting with 4 standardized patient cases in phase one. 19 faculty physicians rating the strategies in phase two. | Clinicians reasoning and strategic medical management was rated using the “Medical checklist, Clinical Reasoning Skills Rating Scale, Interpersonal Skills Rating Scale & Strategic Medical Management Checklist”. | Identification and frequency of strategies used by clinicians when faced with uncertainty | Behaviour patterns when clinicians are faced with diagnostic uncertainty (C) | Nine important strategies were identified: 1) defining the context of diagnosis and explaining symptoms; 2) eliminating alternative diagnoses; 3) describing the prognosis; 4) negotiating problems; 5) negotiating the plan of action; 6) keeping diagnostic options open; 7) cautious not to miss potential diagnoses; 8) appropriate time limited safety netting and 9) appropriate contingency planning. |
| Seaburn 2005 | Observational study with 2 unannounced SP visits (thematic analysis) | Family practice / internists and family physicians | Community based primary care in a metropolitan area ( | NA | NA | Greater knowledge about patient’s life circumstances (C) Physician responses to ambiguous symptom presentations by patients (Eth) | Primary care physicians respond to ambiguity by either ignoring the ambiguity and becoming more directive (UC) or, less often, by acknowledging the ambiguity and attempting to explore symptoms and patient concerns in more detail (HP). |
| Sommers 2007 | Intervention evaluation-thematic and frequency analysis | Primary care physicians/NS | Primary care ( | Practice-based learning in small groups | Intervention “Practice Inquiry” | Not knowing enough about the patient and managing clinician-patient boundaries, expectations and trust (C + Eth) | Of the 30 sites approached between 2002 and 2005, 14 held introductory meetings and by summer 2006, 98 clinicians from 11 sites continued to hold regular Practice Inquiry group meetings suggesting the feasibility and acceptability of the intervention to clinicians. |
SP Standardized patients, NA not applicable, NS not stated, C Cognitive E emotional, Eth ethical