| Literature DB >> 35655159 |
Yinzong Xiao1,2,3, Caroline van Gemert4,5, Jess Howell4,6,5, Jack Wallace4,7,8, Jacqueline Richmond4,7, Emily Adamson4, Alexander Thompson6,5, Margaret Hellard4,5,9,10,11.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: In Australia, only 22% of people with chronic hepatitis B (CHB) are clinically managed; and a national effort is engaging primary care workforce in providing CHB-related care. This study explored CHB-related knowledge, attitudes, barriers and support needs of general practitioners (GPs).Entities:
Keywords: Chronic hepatitis B; General practitioner; Primary care
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35655159 PMCID: PMC9161590 DOI: 10.1186/s12875-022-01754-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Prim Care ISSN: 2731-4553
Fig. 1Flow-chart showing participation of Australian GPs in the hepatitis B management survey, 2018
Comparison of age, gender and practice locations of responding and non-responding GPs
| Respondents ( | Non-respondents ( | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Age > 50 (n, %) | 85 (64)a | 477 (57) b | 0.20 |
| Female (n, %) | 71 (53) | 359 (43) | 0.05 |
| Practice state (n, %) | |||
| New South Wales | 43 (32) | 288 (35) | |
| Victoria | 40 (30) | 173 (21) | |
| Queensland | 20 (15) | 180 (22) | |
| Western Australia | 14 (10) | 83 (10) | |
| South Australia | 12 (9) | 61 (7) | |
| North Territory | 3 (2) | 5 (1) | |
| Australian Capital Territory | 2 (1) | 15 (2) | |
| Tasmania | 0 | 23 (3) | |
| CHB prevalence in practice PHN (%) (mean, SD) | 1.00 (0.03) | 0.99 (0.01) | 0.60 |
| CHB prevalence of practice PHN (%) (n, %) | |||
| [0.52, 0.76) | 36 (27) | 221 (27) | 0.80 |
| [0.76, 1.00) | 43 (32) | 284 (34) | |
| [1.00, 1.23) | 19 (14) | 137 (17) | |
| [1.23,1.47) | 28 (21) | 149 (18) | |
| [1.47, 1.71] | 8 (6) | 37 (4) | |
a Of 133 respondents with age data available. b Of 823 non-respondents with age data available
PHN Primary Health Network
Demographics data of non-respondents were sourced from the AMPCo database. Postcode data of participants’ practice was mapped to states or territories and to PHN as per the 2016–2017 PHN concordance file released by the Australian Bureau of Statistics. The CHB prevalence of each PHN was sourced from Australian hepatitis B mapping project data in 2017
Demographic characteristics of responded GPs of the survey
| Characteristics | n (%) ( |
|---|---|
|
| 71 (53) |
|
| 56 (47–64) |
|
| |
| Private general practice | 120 (90) |
| Aboriginal health service | 11 (8) |
| Community health general practice | 5 (4) |
| Other | 4 (3) |
|
| 32 (24–40) |
|
| |
| Part time (< 40 h/week) | 87 (65) |
| Full time (> = 40 h/week) | 47 (35) |
|
| |
| 0.5%- 1% | 81 (60) |
| 1.0- 1.7% | 53 (40) |
|
| |
| Australia/ New Zealand | 99 (74) |
| Overseas than Australia/New Zealand | 35 (26) |
|
| |
| No | 84 (65) |
| Yes | 47 (35) |
| Top five languages spoken other than English: Mandarin, Cantonese, Italian, French, Hindi | |
|
| |
| < 5% | 54 (40) |
| 5–24% | 50 (37) |
| > 25% | 19 (14) |
| Unsure | 11 (8) |
|
| |
| Yes | 4 (3) |
| No or Unsure | 125 (90) |
| Not reported | 5 (7) |
CHB Chronic hepatitis B., HBV Hepatitis B virus, IQR Inter-quartile range, PHN Primary health network
amultiple choices allowed
Knowledge, perceived GPs role, attitudes, perceived barriers and facilitators related to hepatitis B practice among survey respondents
| Items | n (%) ( |
|---|---|
|
|
|
| I would screen hepatitis B for the following population groups: | |
| CALD communities, particularly if born overseas (true) | 106 (79) |
| Gay, bisexual and other MSM (true) | 129 (96) |
| People who inject drugs (true) | 133 (99) |
| Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people (true) | 117 (87) |
| Close contacts of people with hepatitis B (true) | 126 (94) |
| People with HIV and/or hepatitis C (true) | 132 (99) |
| Sex workers (true) | 129 (96) |
| Chronic hepatitis B infection is a major cause of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) in Australia | 120 (90) |
| Accurate interpretation of “HBsAg positive, anti-HBc positive, anti-HBs negative” (active hepatitis B infection (chronic or acute)) | 110 (82) |
| Patients with active viral replication and active liver damage should be considered for treatment (true) | 129 (96) |
| Treatment is available for hepatitis B (true) | 120 (90) |
| Treatment can be initiated at any phase of hepatitis B infection (false) | 30 (23) a |
| Aware that hepatitis B medications could be dispensed in the community (yes) | 51 (40) |
|
|
|
| It’s part of my work as a GP: | |
| Screening for HBV in patients with increased risk | 127 (95) |
| Monitoring chronic hepatitis B | 115 (86) |
| Prescribing HBV medication for eligible patients | 39 (29) |
| Screening for HCC | 105 (78) |
| None of above | 2 (1) |
|
| |
| Yes | 29 (24) |
| No | 44 (35) |
| Unsure | 50 (41) |
|
| |
| Agreement level of the statement “it will benefit public health if I test for HBV among my high-risk patients” | 10 (9–10) |
| Agreement level of the statement “it will benefit public health if I monitor chronic hepatitis B for my patients, regardless of specialists’ input” | 8 (7–10) |
| Confidence level to monitor chronic hepatitis B | 7 (5–8.5) |
| Confidence level to initiate treatment for hepatitis B | 3 (2–5) |
| Importance level of “screen and manage chronic hepatitis B” compared to other priorities in practice | 8 (7–10) |
|
|
|
| Lack of time | 51 (38) |
| Unclear guidelines | 39 (29) |
| Lack of reminders | 27 (20) |
| Lack of financial incentive | 13 (10) |
| The difficulty of initiating the conversation | 10 (7) |
|
|
|
| Clear guidelines on best practice would be a facilitator | 96 (72) |
| Continuing medical education would be a facilitator | 95 (71) |
| Online resources would be a facilitator | 54 (40) |
| An education resource on plain language for my patients would be a facilitator | 50 (37) |
| Medicare rebate would be a facilitator | 44 (33) |
| Encouragement from colleagues would be a facilitator | 24 (18) |
a n = 133, b n = 131
Self-reported barriers and support needs to providing hepatitis B-related care (categorised free-text comments)
| Barriers | Support needs |
|---|---|
• Patient-related factors - - - • Knowledge and confidence - - • Competing priorities and lack of time - - • Geographic barriers in accessing healthcare facilities - | • Innovative/ guideline to incorporating hepatitis B testing into routine clinical care
• Continued education - • Specialists’ support - • Education resources and programs targeting the community - - |