Danish GPs' perception of disease risk and benefit of prevention

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Standard

Danish GPs' perception of disease risk and benefit of prevention. / Nexøe, Jørgen; Gyrd-Hansen, Dorte; Kragstrup, Jakob; Kristiansen, Ivar Sønbø; Nielsen, Jesper Bo.

I: Family Practice, Bind 19, Nr. 1, 02.2002, s. 3-6.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Nexøe, J, Gyrd-Hansen, D, Kragstrup, J, Kristiansen, IS & Nielsen, JB 2002, 'Danish GPs' perception of disease risk and benefit of prevention', Family Practice, bind 19, nr. 1, s. 3-6. https://doi.org/10.1093/fampra/19.1.3

APA

Nexøe, J., Gyrd-Hansen, D., Kragstrup, J., Kristiansen, I. S., & Nielsen, J. B. (2002). Danish GPs' perception of disease risk and benefit of prevention. Family Practice, 19(1), 3-6. https://doi.org/10.1093/fampra/19.1.3

Vancouver

Nexøe J, Gyrd-Hansen D, Kragstrup J, Kristiansen IS, Nielsen JB. Danish GPs' perception of disease risk and benefit of prevention. Family Practice. 2002 feb.;19(1):3-6. https://doi.org/10.1093/fampra/19.1.3

Author

Nexøe, Jørgen ; Gyrd-Hansen, Dorte ; Kragstrup, Jakob ; Kristiansen, Ivar Sønbø ; Nielsen, Jesper Bo. / Danish GPs' perception of disease risk and benefit of prevention. I: Family Practice. 2002 ; Bind 19, Nr. 1. s. 3-6.

Bibtex

@article{94e760c243c645799ba79294df0f90cc,
title = "Danish GPs' perception of disease risk and benefit of prevention",
abstract = "BACKGROUND: Uncertainty and risk are central issues in relation to health and health care services. Healthy individuals do not necessarily fall ill, despite the presence of risk factors. It has been documented that doctors, health service administrators and patients are more inclined to choose interventions against risk factors when information about the effects is presented in terms of relative risk reductions rather than absolute risk reductions.OBJECTIVES: The objective of the study was to gain better insight into how GPs perceive risk of disease, and how this perception is influenced by the way the risk is presented, e.g. whether changes in risk are presented in absolute or relative terms.METHODS: Questionnaires with clinical episodes were sent to 1500 Danish GPs. The GPs were randomized into four groups of 375, who all received the same case story with information about risk reduction achieved through medical treatment phrased in terms of either relative risk reduction, absolute risk reduction, number needed to treat or all of the aforementioned terms of risk reduction. The GPs were asked whether they would recommend medical treatment as primary prevention, knowing the case story and expected risk reduction.RESULTS: The GPs' attitude towards recommending medical treatment was dependent on the phrasing of risk reductions. Seventy-two per cent of doctors who received all information on risk reductions would definitely or probably recommend medication, while 91% would recommend medication if information only about relative risk reduction was given, and 63% would recommend medication if information was given in terms of absolute risk reduction or number needed to treat.CONCLUSION: In order to advise patients in a rational way, in addition to knowledge of the patients' preferences, doctors need to take into account all available measures of risk reductions.",
keywords = "Attitude of Health Personnel, Denmark, Family Practice, Humans, Preventive Medicine, Risk Assessment",
author = "J{\o}rgen Nex{\o}e and Dorte Gyrd-Hansen and Jakob Kragstrup and Kristiansen, {Ivar S{\o}nb{\o}} and Nielsen, {Jesper Bo}",
year = "2002",
month = feb,
doi = "10.1093/fampra/19.1.3",
language = "English",
volume = "19",
pages = "3--6",
journal = "Family Practice",
issn = "0263-2136",
publisher = "Oxford University Press",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Danish GPs' perception of disease risk and benefit of prevention

AU - Nexøe, Jørgen

AU - Gyrd-Hansen, Dorte

AU - Kragstrup, Jakob

AU - Kristiansen, Ivar Sønbø

AU - Nielsen, Jesper Bo

PY - 2002/2

Y1 - 2002/2

N2 - BACKGROUND: Uncertainty and risk are central issues in relation to health and health care services. Healthy individuals do not necessarily fall ill, despite the presence of risk factors. It has been documented that doctors, health service administrators and patients are more inclined to choose interventions against risk factors when information about the effects is presented in terms of relative risk reductions rather than absolute risk reductions.OBJECTIVES: The objective of the study was to gain better insight into how GPs perceive risk of disease, and how this perception is influenced by the way the risk is presented, e.g. whether changes in risk are presented in absolute or relative terms.METHODS: Questionnaires with clinical episodes were sent to 1500 Danish GPs. The GPs were randomized into four groups of 375, who all received the same case story with information about risk reduction achieved through medical treatment phrased in terms of either relative risk reduction, absolute risk reduction, number needed to treat or all of the aforementioned terms of risk reduction. The GPs were asked whether they would recommend medical treatment as primary prevention, knowing the case story and expected risk reduction.RESULTS: The GPs' attitude towards recommending medical treatment was dependent on the phrasing of risk reductions. Seventy-two per cent of doctors who received all information on risk reductions would definitely or probably recommend medication, while 91% would recommend medication if information only about relative risk reduction was given, and 63% would recommend medication if information was given in terms of absolute risk reduction or number needed to treat.CONCLUSION: In order to advise patients in a rational way, in addition to knowledge of the patients' preferences, doctors need to take into account all available measures of risk reductions.

AB - BACKGROUND: Uncertainty and risk are central issues in relation to health and health care services. Healthy individuals do not necessarily fall ill, despite the presence of risk factors. It has been documented that doctors, health service administrators and patients are more inclined to choose interventions against risk factors when information about the effects is presented in terms of relative risk reductions rather than absolute risk reductions.OBJECTIVES: The objective of the study was to gain better insight into how GPs perceive risk of disease, and how this perception is influenced by the way the risk is presented, e.g. whether changes in risk are presented in absolute or relative terms.METHODS: Questionnaires with clinical episodes were sent to 1500 Danish GPs. The GPs were randomized into four groups of 375, who all received the same case story with information about risk reduction achieved through medical treatment phrased in terms of either relative risk reduction, absolute risk reduction, number needed to treat or all of the aforementioned terms of risk reduction. The GPs were asked whether they would recommend medical treatment as primary prevention, knowing the case story and expected risk reduction.RESULTS: The GPs' attitude towards recommending medical treatment was dependent on the phrasing of risk reductions. Seventy-two per cent of doctors who received all information on risk reductions would definitely or probably recommend medication, while 91% would recommend medication if information only about relative risk reduction was given, and 63% would recommend medication if information was given in terms of absolute risk reduction or number needed to treat.CONCLUSION: In order to advise patients in a rational way, in addition to knowledge of the patients' preferences, doctors need to take into account all available measures of risk reductions.

KW - Attitude of Health Personnel

KW - Denmark

KW - Family Practice

KW - Humans

KW - Preventive Medicine

KW - Risk Assessment

U2 - 10.1093/fampra/19.1.3

DO - 10.1093/fampra/19.1.3

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 11818342

VL - 19

SP - 3

EP - 6

JO - Family Practice

JF - Family Practice

SN - 0263-2136

IS - 1

ER -

ID: 324191353