Clinical inertia in general practice, a matter of debate: a qualitative study with 114 general practitioners in Belgium

Prescribing that is not concordant with guidelines is increasingly referred to as clinical inertia (CI). However, CI may be only apparent, and the absence of decision may actually reflect appropriate inaction as a result of good clinical reasoning. Our study aimed to: (i) elucidate GPs' beliefs...

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Veröffentlicht in:BMC family practice 2015-02, Vol.16 (1), p.13-13, Article 13
Hauptverfasser: Aujoulat, Isabelle, Jacquemin, Patricia, Hermans, Michel P, Rietzschel, Ernst, Scheen, André, Tréfois, Patrick, Darras, Elisabeth, Wens, Johan
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container_end_page 13
container_issue 1
container_start_page 13
container_title BMC family practice
container_volume 16
creator Aujoulat, Isabelle
Jacquemin, Patricia
Hermans, Michel P
Rietzschel, Ernst
Scheen, André
Tréfois, Patrick
Darras, Elisabeth
Wens, Johan
description Prescribing that is not concordant with guidelines is increasingly referred to as clinical inertia (CI). However, CI may be only apparent, and the absence of decision may actually reflect appropriate inaction as a result of good clinical reasoning. Our study aimed to: (i) elucidate GPs' beliefs regarding CI and the risk of CI in their own practice, (ii) identify modifiable provider-related factors associated with CI. We conducted 8 group interviews with 114 general practitioners (GP) in Belgium, and used an integrated approach of thematic analysis. Our results call for a redefinition of CI, in order to take into account the GPs' extended health-promoting role, and acknowledge that inaction or delayed action follows a process of clinical reasoning that takes into account the patients' preferences, and that is appropriate most of the time. However, the participants in our study did acknowledge that the risk of CI exists in practice. The main factor of such a risk is when GPs feel overwhelmed and disempowered, due to characteristics of either the patients or the health care system, including contradictions between guidelines and reimbursement policies. Although situations of clinical inertia exist in practice and need to be prevented or corrected, the term clinical inertia could potentially increase the already existing gap between general practice and specialised care, whereas sustained efforts toward more collaborative work and integrated care are called for.
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The main factor of such a risk is when GPs feel overwhelmed and disempowered, due to characteristics of either the patients or the health care system, including contradictions between guidelines and reimbursement policies. 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However, CI may be only apparent, and the absence of decision may actually reflect appropriate inaction as a result of good clinical reasoning. Our study aimed to: (i) elucidate GPs' beliefs regarding CI and the risk of CI in their own practice, (ii) identify modifiable provider-related factors associated with CI. We conducted 8 group interviews with 114 general practitioners (GP) in Belgium, and used an integrated approach of thematic analysis. Our results call for a redefinition of CI, in order to take into account the GPs' extended health-promoting role, and acknowledge that inaction or delayed action follows a process of clinical reasoning that takes into account the patients' preferences, and that is appropriate most of the time. However, the participants in our study did acknowledge that the risk of CI exists in practice. 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subjects Adult
Clinical inertia
Female
Focus Groups
General Practice - standards
General Practitioners
Guideline Adherence - statistics & numerical data
Human health sciences
Humans
Male
Medicine
Physician-Patient Relations
Practice
Practice Patterns, Physicians' - statistics & numerical data
Prevention
Public health, health care sciences & services
Santé publique, services médicaux & soins de santé
Sciences de la santé humaine
title Clinical inertia in general practice, a matter of debate: a qualitative study with 114 general practitioners in Belgium
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