OBJECTIVES: To learn about cancer prevention services in primary care practices and to understand physician factors that affect the provision of these services. DESIGN: Survey of physicians and their patients in 1992. SETTING: Cooperating physicians (n = 72) of a random selection of community general internist and family physician practices in New Hampshire and Vermont. PATIENTS: Patients (n = 2775) of the study physicians for at least 1 year, aged 42 years or older, with no life-threatening threatening illness, who recently visited the physician. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Proportion of sample patients per practice provided age- and sex-appropriate cancer prevention services in the previous year. RESULTS: In this primary care population, a high proportion of patients received appropriate services in 1992. A periodic health examination within the past year was an important predictor for the receipt of many cancer prevention services. Female physicians provided more periodic health examinations than male physicians; internists provided more than family physicians. CONCLUSIONS: The strongest determinant of receiving preventive services is having a periodic health examination. If clinicians and policymakers decrease emphasis on the periodic health examination as a major opportunity to provide indicated preventive services, they should ensure that a satisfactory alternative strategy is in place.
OBJECTIVES: To learn about cancer prevention services in primary care practices and to understand physician factors that affect the provision of these services. DESIGN: Survey of physicians and their patients in 1992. SETTING: Cooperating physicians (n = 72) of a random selection of community general internist and family physician practices in New Hampshire and Vermont. PATIENTS: Patients (n = 2775) of the study physicians for at least 1 year, aged 42 years or older, with no life-threatening threatening illness, who recently visited the physician. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Proportion of sample patients per practice provided age- and sex-appropriate cancer prevention services in the previous year. RESULTS: In this primary care population, a high proportion of patients received appropriate services in 1992. A periodic health examination within the past year was an important predictor for the receipt of many cancer prevention services. Female physicians provided more periodic health examinations than male physicians; internists provided more than family physicians. CONCLUSIONS: The strongest determinant of receiving preventive services is having a periodic health examination. If clinicians and policymakers decrease emphasis on the periodic health examination as a major opportunity to provide indicated preventive services, they should ensure that a satisfactory alternative strategy is in place.
Authors: Joshua J Fenton; Yong Cai; Noel S Weiss; Joann G Elmore; Roy E Pardee; Robert J Reid; Laura-Mae Baldwin Journal: Arch Intern Med Date: 2007-03-26
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