Abstract

BackgroundLittle is known about the participation of surgeons in preventative health activities in the non-admitted hospital care setting. The aim of this study was to identify which preventive health activities surgeons practice and to explore their attitudes towards preventive health.MethodsA mixed methods study was conducted using a sequential explanatory design. Quantitative results were obtained from a self-reported clinician survey (n = 16) and a Generalized Estimating Equation was used to assess the relationship between dependent (preventive health practice) and independent (confidence and knowledge in preventive health practice, years of practice, and attitudinal factors) variables. Using a building approach to integration, results from the quantitative analyses informed design of the interview guide. Surgeons’ beliefs and attitudes were explored using in-depth, semi structured interviews with a purposeful sample of surgeons (n = 14). Responses were collected, independently coded and analysed using a qualitative descriptive approach.ResultsIn accordance with a contiguous narrative approach to integration, the quantitative and qualitative findings are reported separately. The clinician survey found that the surgeons carried out preventive health activities at low levels. Preventive health advice was predominantly verbal in nature, and few surgeons provided written material or referred patients to additional services. The GEE analyses indicated that the following factors best predicted the tendency to undertake preventive health activities: years of clinical practice (p = 0.041), and the perceived work priority placed on preventive health (p = 0.008). Interviews generated four themes that influenced the tendency of surgeons to undertake preventive health activities: perceptions of their role in preventive health, perceived motivation of patients, hospital structure, and facilitating factors. In regards to enabling factors that are likely to increase preventive health practice, surgeons unanimously advocated for referral pathways into specialist behaviour change programs that they could facilitate within their relatively brief consulting time.ConclusionsThe findings suggests that the majority of public hospital surgeons engage in routine preventive health advice at a low level. The high volume of non-admitted surgical consultations undertaken annually, coupled with medium to high self-reported knowledge and confidence in addressing behavioural risk factors, support an increased involvement of surgeons in preventive health practice.

Highlights

  • Little is known about the participation of surgeons in preventative health activities in the nonadmitted hospital care setting

  • The increased prevalence of chronic diseases has influenced demands on the health system [3], with chronic diseases leading to hospitalisations, long-term disability, and rehabilitation costs [4]

  • Surgeons have an important role in advocating for behaviour change for patients with, or at risk of, chronic disease [9]

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Summary

Introduction

Little is known about the participation of surgeons in preventative health activities in the nonadmitted hospital care setting. Chronic non-communicable diseases are the foremost cause of preventable illness, disability and death worldwide [1]. Diet, and insufficient physical activity are the primary behavioural risk factors behind preventable chronic diseases [2]. Surgeons have an important role in advocating for behaviour change for patients with, or at risk of, chronic disease [9]. Due to their extensive medical training and specialisation, surgeons are regarded as reliable sources of medical advice, extending beyond their expertise in surgical care [6]. There is a scarcity of research investigating preventive health practice in non-admitted surgical practice

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