General practitioners experience multi-level barriers to implementing recommended care for hip and knee osteoarthritis: a qualitative study
Background General practitioners (GPs) play a key role in managing osteoarthritis, including referring to appropriate management services. Physiotherapist-led osteoarthritis management programs and advanced practice triage services are effective, but GPs views on them are largely unknown. This study...
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| Vydané v: | BMC family practice Ročník 25; číslo 1; s. 423 - 11 |
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| Hlavní autori: | , , , , , , |
| Médium: | Journal Article |
| Jazyk: | English |
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London
BioMed Central
19.12.2024
BioMed Central Ltd Springer Nature B.V BMC |
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| ISSN: | 2731-4553, 2731-4553, 1471-2296 |
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| Abstract | Background
General practitioners (GPs) play a key role in managing osteoarthritis, including referring to appropriate management services. Physiotherapist-led osteoarthritis management programs and advanced practice triage services are effective, but GPs views on them are largely unknown. This study aimed to explore general practitioner perspectives on: (1) managing patients with hip and knee osteoarthritis, and (2) physiotherapy-led osteoarthritis care and referral pathways.
Methods
Interview topic guides were developed based on the theoretical domains framework. Twenty-five semi-structured interviews with GPs were conducted. All data were coded independently by at least two researchers and analysed inductively using thematic analysis, with barrier themes mapped to the socioecological model.
Results
Two interrelated themes were identified: (i) GPs had good general knowledge of recommended osteoarthritis care, but (ii) they faced multi-level challenges facilitating or directly providing evidence-based care. Nearly all GPs identified exercise as first-line care and surgery as a last resort. Most were aware imaging was not required to diagnose osteoarthritis, yet reported often referring for imaging. Many GPs expressed challenges facilitating patient engagement in physiotherapy due to patient, environmental/social and system level barriers. Key barriers included: perceived patient expectations and lack of motivation to attend physiotherapy, a lack of knowledge of available physiotherapy services, a lack of affordable physiotherapy services, and lengthy waiting times for public orthopaedic appointments. Having private health insurance was perceived as an enabler.
Conclusions
Despite having good knowledge of guideline-recommended care, GPs in our study experienced multi-level barriers to implementing this care in practice. Public health information and strategies to address patient’s beliefs and lack of motivation to exercise may help reduce barriers to engaging in appropriate care. Urgent health system funding reforms are needed to allow GPs to appropriately manage patients with hip and knee osteoarthritis. |
|---|---|
| AbstractList | Background
General practitioners (GPs) play a key role in managing osteoarthritis, including referring to appropriate management services. Physiotherapist-led osteoarthritis management programs and advanced practice triage services are effective, but GPs views on them are largely unknown. This study aimed to explore general practitioner perspectives on: (1) managing patients with hip and knee osteoarthritis, and (2) physiotherapy-led osteoarthritis care and referral pathways.
Methods
Interview topic guides were developed based on the theoretical domains framework. Twenty-five semi-structured interviews with GPs were conducted. All data were coded independently by at least two researchers and analysed inductively using thematic analysis, with barrier themes mapped to the socioecological model.
Results
Two interrelated themes were identified: (i) GPs had good general knowledge of recommended osteoarthritis care, but (ii) they faced multi-level challenges facilitating or directly providing evidence-based care. Nearly all GPs identified exercise as first-line care and surgery as a last resort. Most were aware imaging was not required to diagnose osteoarthritis, yet reported often referring for imaging. Many GPs expressed challenges facilitating patient engagement in physiotherapy due to patient, environmental/social and system level barriers. Key barriers included: perceived patient expectations and lack of motivation to attend physiotherapy, a lack of knowledge of available physiotherapy services, a lack of affordable physiotherapy services, and lengthy waiting times for public orthopaedic appointments. Having private health insurance was perceived as an enabler.
Conclusions
Despite having good knowledge of guideline-recommended care, GPs in our study experienced multi-level barriers to implementing this care in practice. Public health information and strategies to address patient’s beliefs and lack of motivation to exercise may help reduce barriers to engaging in appropriate care. Urgent health system funding reforms are needed to allow GPs to appropriately manage patients with hip and knee osteoarthritis. General practitioners (GPs) play a key role in managing osteoarthritis, including referring to appropriate management services. Physiotherapist-led osteoarthritis management programs and advanced practice triage services are effective, but GPs views on them are largely unknown. This study aimed to explore general practitioner perspectives on: (1) managing patients with hip and knee osteoarthritis, and (2) physiotherapy-led osteoarthritis care and referral pathways. Interview topic guides were developed based on the theoretical domains framework. Twenty-five semi-structured interviews with GPs were conducted. All data were coded independently by at least two researchers and analysed inductively using thematic analysis, with barrier themes mapped to the socioecological model. Two interrelated themes were identified: (i) GPs had good general knowledge of recommended osteoarthritis care, but (ii) they faced multi-level challenges facilitating or directly providing evidence-based care. Nearly all GPs identified exercise as first-line care and surgery as a last resort. Most were aware imaging was not required to diagnose osteoarthritis, yet reported often referring for imaging. Many GPs expressed challenges facilitating patient engagement in physiotherapy due to patient, environmental/social and system level barriers. Key barriers included: perceived patient expectations and lack of motivation to attend physiotherapy, a lack of knowledge of available physiotherapy services, a lack of affordable physiotherapy services, and lengthy waiting times for public orthopaedic appointments. Having private health insurance was perceived as an enabler. Despite having good knowledge of guideline-recommended care, GPs in our study experienced multi-level barriers to implementing this care in practice. Public health information and strategies to address patient's beliefs and lack of motivation to exercise may help reduce barriers to engaging in appropriate care. Urgent health system funding reforms are needed to allow GPs to appropriately manage patients with hip and knee osteoarthritis. General practitioners (GPs) play a key role in managing osteoarthritis, including referring to appropriate management services. Physiotherapist-led osteoarthritis management programs and advanced practice triage services are effective, but GPs views on them are largely unknown. This study aimed to explore general practitioner perspectives on: (1) managing patients with hip and knee osteoarthritis, and (2) physiotherapy-led osteoarthritis care and referral pathways. Interview topic guides were developed based on the theoretical domains framework. Twenty-five semi-structured interviews with GPs were conducted. All data were coded independently by at least two researchers and analysed inductively using thematic analysis, with barrier themes mapped to the socioecological model. Two interrelated themes were identified: (i) GPs had good general knowledge of recommended osteoarthritis care, but (ii) they faced multi-level challenges facilitating or directly providing evidence-based care. Nearly all GPs identified exercise as first-line care and surgery as a last resort. Most were aware imaging was not required to diagnose osteoarthritis, yet reported often referring for imaging. Many GPs expressed challenges facilitating patient engagement in physiotherapy due to patient, environmental/social and system level barriers. Key barriers included: perceived patient expectations and lack of motivation to attend physiotherapy, a lack of knowledge of available physiotherapy services, a lack of affordable physiotherapy services, and lengthy waiting times for public orthopaedic appointments. Having private health insurance was perceived as an enabler. Despite having good knowledge of guideline-recommended care, GPs in our study experienced multi-level barriers to implementing this care in practice. Public health information and strategies to address patient's beliefs and lack of motivation to exercise may help reduce barriers to engaging in appropriate care. Urgent health system funding reforms are needed to allow GPs to appropriately manage patients with hip and knee osteoarthritis. General practitioners (GPs) play a key role in managing osteoarthritis, including referring to appropriate management services. Physiotherapist-led osteoarthritis management programs and advanced practice triage services are effective, but GPs views on them are largely unknown. This study aimed to explore general practitioner perspectives on: (1) managing patients with hip and knee osteoarthritis, and (2) physiotherapy-led osteoarthritis care and referral pathways.BACKGROUNDGeneral practitioners (GPs) play a key role in managing osteoarthritis, including referring to appropriate management services. Physiotherapist-led osteoarthritis management programs and advanced practice triage services are effective, but GPs views on them are largely unknown. This study aimed to explore general practitioner perspectives on: (1) managing patients with hip and knee osteoarthritis, and (2) physiotherapy-led osteoarthritis care and referral pathways.Interview topic guides were developed based on the theoretical domains framework. Twenty-five semi-structured interviews with GPs were conducted. All data were coded independently by at least two researchers and analysed inductively using thematic analysis, with barrier themes mapped to the socioecological model.METHODSInterview topic guides were developed based on the theoretical domains framework. Twenty-five semi-structured interviews with GPs were conducted. All data were coded independently by at least two researchers and analysed inductively using thematic analysis, with barrier themes mapped to the socioecological model.Two interrelated themes were identified: (i) GPs had good general knowledge of recommended osteoarthritis care, but (ii) they faced multi-level challenges facilitating or directly providing evidence-based care. Nearly all GPs identified exercise as first-line care and surgery as a last resort. Most were aware imaging was not required to diagnose osteoarthritis, yet reported often referring for imaging. Many GPs expressed challenges facilitating patient engagement in physiotherapy due to patient, environmental/social and system level barriers. Key barriers included: perceived patient expectations and lack of motivation to attend physiotherapy, a lack of knowledge of available physiotherapy services, a lack of affordable physiotherapy services, and lengthy waiting times for public orthopaedic appointments. Having private health insurance was perceived as an enabler.RESULTSTwo interrelated themes were identified: (i) GPs had good general knowledge of recommended osteoarthritis care, but (ii) they faced multi-level challenges facilitating or directly providing evidence-based care. Nearly all GPs identified exercise as first-line care and surgery as a last resort. Most were aware imaging was not required to diagnose osteoarthritis, yet reported often referring for imaging. Many GPs expressed challenges facilitating patient engagement in physiotherapy due to patient, environmental/social and system level barriers. Key barriers included: perceived patient expectations and lack of motivation to attend physiotherapy, a lack of knowledge of available physiotherapy services, a lack of affordable physiotherapy services, and lengthy waiting times for public orthopaedic appointments. Having private health insurance was perceived as an enabler.Despite having good knowledge of guideline-recommended care, GPs in our study experienced multi-level barriers to implementing this care in practice. Public health information and strategies to address patient's beliefs and lack of motivation to exercise may help reduce barriers to engaging in appropriate care. Urgent health system funding reforms are needed to allow GPs to appropriately manage patients with hip and knee osteoarthritis.CONCLUSIONSDespite having good knowledge of guideline-recommended care, GPs in our study experienced multi-level barriers to implementing this care in practice. Public health information and strategies to address patient's beliefs and lack of motivation to exercise may help reduce barriers to engaging in appropriate care. Urgent health system funding reforms are needed to allow GPs to appropriately manage patients with hip and knee osteoarthritis. Background General practitioners (GPs) play a key role in managing osteoarthritis, including referring to appropriate management services. Physiotherapist-led osteoarthritis management programs and advanced practice triage services are effective, but GPs views on them are largely unknown. This study aimed to explore general practitioner perspectives on: (1) managing patients with hip and knee osteoarthritis, and (2) physiotherapy-led osteoarthritis care and referral pathways. Methods Interview topic guides were developed based on the theoretical domains framework. Twenty-five semi-structured interviews with GPs were conducted. All data were coded independently by at least two researchers and analysed inductively using thematic analysis, with barrier themes mapped to the socioecological model. Results Two interrelated themes were identified: (i) GPs had good general knowledge of recommended osteoarthritis care, but (ii) they faced multi-level challenges facilitating or directly providing evidence-based care. Nearly all GPs identified exercise as first-line care and surgery as a last resort. Most were aware imaging was not required to diagnose osteoarthritis, yet reported often referring for imaging. Many GPs expressed challenges facilitating patient engagement in physiotherapy due to patient, environmental/social and system level barriers. Key barriers included: perceived patient expectations and lack of motivation to attend physiotherapy, a lack of knowledge of available physiotherapy services, a lack of affordable physiotherapy services, and lengthy waiting times for public orthopaedic appointments. Having private health insurance was perceived as an enabler. Conclusions Despite having good knowledge of guideline-recommended care, GPs in our study experienced multi-level barriers to implementing this care in practice. Public health information and strategies to address patient’s beliefs and lack of motivation to exercise may help reduce barriers to engaging in appropriate care. Urgent health system funding reforms are needed to allow GPs to appropriately manage patients with hip and knee osteoarthritis. Background General practitioners (GPs) play a key role in managing osteoarthritis, including referring to appropriate management services. Physiotherapist-led osteoarthritis management programs and advanced practice triage services are effective, but GPs views on them are largely unknown. This study aimed to explore general practitioner perspectives on: (1) managing patients with hip and knee osteoarthritis, and (2) physiotherapy-led osteoarthritis care and referral pathways. Methods Interview topic guides were developed based on the theoretical domains framework. Twenty-five semi-structured interviews with GPs were conducted. All data were coded independently by at least two researchers and analysed inductively using thematic analysis, with barrier themes mapped to the socioecological model. Results Two interrelated themes were identified: (i) GPs had good general knowledge of recommended osteoarthritis care, but (ii) they faced multi-level challenges facilitating or directly providing evidence-based care. Nearly all GPs identified exercise as first-line care and surgery as a last resort. Most were aware imaging was not required to diagnose osteoarthritis, yet reported often referring for imaging. Many GPs expressed challenges facilitating patient engagement in physiotherapy due to patient, environmental/social and system level barriers. Key barriers included: perceived patient expectations and lack of motivation to attend physiotherapy, a lack of knowledge of available physiotherapy services, a lack of affordable physiotherapy services, and lengthy waiting times for public orthopaedic appointments. Having private health insurance was perceived as an enabler. Conclusions Despite having good knowledge of guideline-recommended care, GPs in our study experienced multi-level barriers to implementing this care in practice. Public health information and strategies to address patient's beliefs and lack of motivation to exercise may help reduce barriers to engaging in appropriate care. Urgent health system funding reforms are needed to allow GPs to appropriately manage patients with hip and knee osteoarthritis. Keywords: Osteoarthritis management, General practitioner, Physiotherapy, Barriers, Qualitative BackgroundGeneral practitioners (GPs) play a key role in managing osteoarthritis, including referring to appropriate management services. Physiotherapist-led osteoarthritis management programs and advanced practice triage services are effective, but GPs views on them are largely unknown. This study aimed to explore general practitioner perspectives on: (1) managing patients with hip and knee osteoarthritis, and (2) physiotherapy-led osteoarthritis care and referral pathways.MethodsInterview topic guides were developed based on the theoretical domains framework. Twenty-five semi-structured interviews with GPs were conducted. All data were coded independently by at least two researchers and analysed inductively using thematic analysis, with barrier themes mapped to the socioecological model.ResultsTwo interrelated themes were identified: (i) GPs had good general knowledge of recommended osteoarthritis care, but (ii) they faced multi-level challenges facilitating or directly providing evidence-based care. Nearly all GPs identified exercise as first-line care and surgery as a last resort. Most were aware imaging was not required to diagnose osteoarthritis, yet reported often referring for imaging. Many GPs expressed challenges facilitating patient engagement in physiotherapy due to patient, environmental/social and system level barriers. Key barriers included: perceived patient expectations and lack of motivation to attend physiotherapy, a lack of knowledge of available physiotherapy services, a lack of affordable physiotherapy services, and lengthy waiting times for public orthopaedic appointments. Having private health insurance was perceived as an enabler.ConclusionsDespite having good knowledge of guideline-recommended care, GPs in our study experienced multi-level barriers to implementing this care in practice. Public health information and strategies to address patient’s beliefs and lack of motivation to exercise may help reduce barriers to engaging in appropriate care. Urgent health system funding reforms are needed to allow GPs to appropriately manage patients with hip and knee osteoarthritis. |
| ArticleNumber | 423 |
| Audience | Academic |
| Author | Ezzat, Allison M. Barton, Christian J. Kemp, Joanne L. Wallis, Jason A. Gibbs, Alison J. Manski-Nankervis, Jo-Anne Taylor, Nicholas F. |
| Author_xml | – sequence: 1 givenname: Alison J. surname: Gibbs fullname: Gibbs, Alison J. email: a.gibbs@latrobe.edu.au organization: La Trobe Sports and Exercise Medicine Research Centre, School of Allied Health, Human Services and Sport, La Trobe University, Department of Physiotherapy, Podiatry, Prosthetics and Orthotics, School of Allied Health, Human Services and Sport, La Trobe University, Physiotherapy Department, Eastern Health, Box Hill Hospital – sequence: 2 givenname: Christian J. surname: Barton fullname: Barton, Christian J. organization: La Trobe Sports and Exercise Medicine Research Centre, School of Allied Health, Human Services and Sport, La Trobe University, Department of Physiotherapy, Podiatry, Prosthetics and Orthotics, School of Allied Health, Human Services and Sport, La Trobe University – sequence: 3 givenname: Nicholas F. surname: Taylor fullname: Taylor, Nicholas F. organization: Department of Physiotherapy, Podiatry, Prosthetics and Orthotics, School of Allied Health, Human Services and Sport, La Trobe University, Allied Health Clinical Research Office, Eastern Health – sequence: 4 givenname: Joanne L. surname: Kemp fullname: Kemp, Joanne L. organization: La Trobe Sports and Exercise Medicine Research Centre, School of Allied Health, Human Services and Sport, La Trobe University – sequence: 5 givenname: Jason A. surname: Wallis fullname: Wallis, Jason A. organization: Department of Physiotherapy, Podiatry, Prosthetics and Orthotics, School of Allied Health, Human Services and Sport, La Trobe University, School of Public Health & Preventive Medicine, Monash University – sequence: 6 givenname: Jo-Anne surname: Manski-Nankervis fullname: Manski-Nankervis, Jo-Anne organization: Primary Care and Family Medicine, Lee Kong Chian School of Medicine, Nanyang Technological University, Department of General Practice and Primary Care, Melbourne Medical School, University of Melbourne – sequence: 7 givenname: Allison M. surname: Ezzat fullname: Ezzat, Allison M. organization: La Trobe Sports and Exercise Medicine Research Centre, School of Allied Health, Human Services and Sport, La Trobe University, Department of Physical Therapy, Faculty of Medicine, University of British Columbia |
| BackLink | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/39702012$$D View this record in MEDLINE/PubMed |
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| CitedBy_id | crossref_primary_10_1016_j_ocarto_2025_100647 |
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| Keywords | Osteoarthritis management Qualitative General practitioner Barriers Physiotherapy |
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| PublicationDate_xml | – month: 12 year: 2024 text: 2024-12-19 day: 19 |
| PublicationDecade | 2020 |
| PublicationPlace | London |
| PublicationPlace_xml | – name: London – name: England |
| PublicationTitle | BMC family practice |
| PublicationTitleAbbrev | BMC Prim. Care |
| PublicationTitleAlternate | BMC Prim Care |
| PublicationYear | 2024 |
| Publisher | BioMed Central BioMed Central Ltd Springer Nature B.V BMC |
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General practitioners (GPs) play a key role in managing osteoarthritis, including referring to appropriate management services. Physiotherapist-led... General practitioners (GPs) play a key role in managing osteoarthritis, including referring to appropriate management services. Physiotherapist-led... Background General practitioners (GPs) play a key role in managing osteoarthritis, including referring to appropriate management services. Physiotherapist-led... BackgroundGeneral practitioners (GPs) play a key role in managing osteoarthritis, including referring to appropriate management services. Physiotherapist-led... |
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| SubjectTerms | Adult Attitude of Health Personnel Barriers Care and treatment Data collection Family Medicine Female General Practice General practitioner General Practitioners - psychology Humans Influence Interviews Interviews as Topic Knee Knowledge Male Medical personnel Medical referrals Medical research Medicine Medicine & Public Health Middle Aged Narcotics Orthopedics Osteoarthritis Osteoarthritis management Osteoarthritis, Hip - therapy Osteoarthritis, Knee - rehabilitation Osteoarthritis, Knee - therapy Out of pocket costs Patient satisfaction Physical therapy Physical Therapy Modalities Physicians (General practice) Physiotherapy Practice Primary care Primary Care Medicine Professionals Qualitative Qualitative Research Referral and Consultation Surgeons Surgery Surveys Therapeutics, Physiological |
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| Title | General practitioners experience multi-level barriers to implementing recommended care for hip and knee osteoarthritis: a qualitative study |
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