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Preventing delayed diagnosis of cancer: clinicians’ views on main problems and solutions

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2016

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Edinburgh University Global Health Society
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Car, Lorainne Tudor, Nikolaos Papachristou, Catherine Urch, Azeem Majeed, Mona El–Khatib, Paul Aylin, Rifat Atun, Josip Car, and Charles Vincent. 2016. “Preventing delayed diagnosis of cancer: clinicians’ views on main problems and solutions.” Journal of Global Health 6 (2): 020901. doi:10.7189/jogh.06.020901. http://dx.doi.org/10.7189/jogh.06.020901.

Abstract

Background: Delayed diagnosis is a major contributing factor to the UK’s lower cancer survival compared to many European countries. In the UK, there is a significant national variation in early cancer diagnosis. Healthcare providers can offer an insight into local priorities for timely cancer diagnosis. In this study, we aimed to identify the main problems and solutions relating to delay cancer diagnosis according to cancer care clinicians. Methods: We developed and implemented a new priority–setting approach called PRIORITIZE and invited North West London cancer care clinicians to identify and prioritize main causes for and solutions to delayed diagnosis of cancer care. Results: Clinicians identified a number of concrete problems and solutions relating to delayed diagnosis of cancer. Raising public awareness, patient education as well as better access to specialist care and diagnostic testing were seen as the highest priorities. The identified suggestions focused mostly on the delays during referrals from primary to secondary care. Conclusions: Many identified priorities were feasible, affordable and converged around common themes such as public awareness, care continuity and length of consultation. As a timely, proactive and scalable priority–setting approach, PRIORITZE could be implemented as a routine preventative system for determining patient safety issues by frontline staff.

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