Abstract
ObjectiveTo determine physician perspectives about direct notification of normal and abnormal test results. MethodsWe conducted a cross-sectional survey at five clinical sites in the US and Australia. The US-based study was conducted via web-based survey of primary care physicians and specialists between July and October 2012. An identical paper-based survey was self-administered between June and September 2012 with specialists in Australia. ResultsOf 1417 physicians invited, 315 (22.2%) completed the survey. Two-thirds (65.3%) believed that patients should be directly notified of normal results, but only 21.3% were comfortable with direct notification of clinically significant abnormal results. Physicians were more likely to endorse direct notification of abnormal results if they believed it would reduce the number of patients lost to follow-up (OR=4.98, 95%CI=2.21–1.21) or if they had personally missed an abnormal test result (OR=2.95, 95%CI=1.44–6.02). Conversely, physicians were less likely to endorse if they believed that direct notification interfered with the practice of medicine (OR=0.39, 95%CI=0.20–0.74). ConclusionPhysicians we surveyed generally favor direct notification of normal results but appear to have substantial concerns about direct notification of abnormal results. Practice implicationsWidespread use of direct notification should be accompanied by strategies to help patients manage test result abnormalities they receive.
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