COMMUNICATION BETWEEN PHYSICIANS AND WITH PATIENTS SUFFERING FROM BREAST-CANCER

Citation
Wj. Vanderkam et al., COMMUNICATION BETWEEN PHYSICIANS AND WITH PATIENTS SUFFERING FROM BREAST-CANCER, Family practice (Print), 15(5), 1998, pp. 415-419
Citations number
17
Categorie Soggetti
Medicine, General & Internal
Journal title
ISSN journal
02632136
Volume
15
Issue
5
Year of publication
1998
Pages
415 - 419
Database
ISI
SICI code
0263-2136(1998)15:5<415:CBPAWP>2.0.ZU;2-P
Abstract
Background. The communication between GP and specialists is vital for the patient suffering from breast cancer. Objectives. The aim of this study was to investigate (i) the speed and type of communication betwe en GPs, specialists and patients with breast cancer, and (ii) the prob lems that GPs encounter in the communication with specialists concerni ng these patients. Method. In April 1995, 246 Dutch GPs from the Zwoll e region (600 000 inhabitants) were invited to complete a questionnair e, using the information from the medical record and focusing on the l ast patient consulted with a confirmed diagnosis of breast cancer. Res ults. Valid replies were received from 150 (61%) GPs. The median perio d between initial referral date and receipt of the definite diagnosis from the surgeon was 4 weeks. After the patient's first appointment wi th the surgeon, the GPs received reports for 24% of the patients withi n 3 days; for 31% within 3-7 days; and for 16% of the patients after m ore than 2 weeks. After the first consultation between patient and sur geon, 68 (45%) of the 150 GPs reported that the patient contacted them ; at this stage only 30 (20%) of these GPs had received a report from the surgeon. Thirty-one (21%) GPs did not contact the patient after re ceival of the definite diagnosis. GPs stated that the communication on patients with breast cancer is too slow (49%), or not frequent enough (25%); 25% of GPs found that the distribution of tasks between them a nd the specialists are not well described. Conclusion. In the diagnost ic stage of breast cancer the communication between GPs, specialists a nd patients varies widely, is too slow and is incomplete. An effect of this unsatisfactory communication is that the patient herself is the messenger of the bad news.