General practitioners’ clinical decision-making in patients that could have cancer: a vignette study comparing the Baltic states with four Nordic countries
Alexander Rosendahl, Anet Vanaveski, Liina Pilv-Toom, Jānis Blumfelds, Vija Siliņa, Mette Brekke, Tuomas Koskela, Aurimas Rapalavičius, Hans Thulesius, Peter Vedsted, Michael Harris

TL;DR
This study compares how GPs in the Baltic states and Nordic countries handle cancer risk in patients, finding that Baltic GPs are more likely to act immediately.
Contribution
The study provides new insights into regional differences in GP decision-making for cancer risk, challenging assumptions about diagnostic behavior.
Findings
Baltic state GPs were more likely to arrange tests or refer patients compared to Nordic GPs.
More experienced GPs were more likely to take immediate diagnostic action.
GP sex and location within a country did not significantly affect diagnostic decisions.
Abstract
Relative one-year cancer survival rates in the Baltic states are lower than the European mean; in the Nordic countries they are higher than the mean. This study investigated the likelihood of General Practitioners (GPs) investigating or referring patients with a low but significant risk of cancer in these two regions, and how this was affected by GP demographics. A survey of GPs using clinical vignettes. General Practice in Denmark, Estonia, Finland, Latvia, Lithuania, Norway, and Sweden. General Practitioners. A regional comparison of GPs’ stated immediate diagnostic actions (whether or not they would perform a key diagnostic test and/or refer to a specialist) for patients with a low but significant risk of cancer (between 1.2 and 3.6%). Of the 427 GPs that completed the questionnaire, those in the Baltic states, and GPs that were more experienced, were more likely to arrange a…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPatient-Provider Communication in Healthcare · Global Cancer Incidence and Screening · Palliative Care and End-of-Life Issues
