Abstract

Background‘Candidacy’ is concerned with the way people consider their eligibility for accessing health services. We used the Candidacy Framework to explore how the doctor-patient relationship can influence perceived eligibility to visit their General Practitioner (GP) among people experiencing cancer alarm symptoms.MethodsWe carried out a secondary analysis of qualitative interviews with 29 women and 33 men, aged ≥50 years experiencing cancer alarm symptoms, recruited through primary care. Interviews focused on symptom experience, help-seeking and primary care use. Framework analysis was used to analyse transcripts with a focus on GP-patient interactions.ResultsPerceived (im)permeability of services acted as a barrier to help-seeking, due to limited availability of appointments, time-limited communication and difficulties asserting candidacy. There was also a focal role of communication in building a positive doctor-patient relationship, with some participants describing resisting offers of appointments as a result of previous negative GP adjudication. These factors not only influenced the current consultation but had longer-term consequences for future consultation.ConclusionsCandidacy provides a valuable theoretical framework to understand the interactional factors of the doctor-patient relationship which influence perceived eligibility to seek help for possible cancer alarm symptoms. We have highlighted areas for targeted interventions to improve patient-centred care and improve earlier diagnosis.

Highlights

  • The Candidacy Framework describes how people assess their eligibility for accessing health services and how they legitimise their interaction and engagement with services [1, 2]

  • Sample characteristics Sixty-two people who were experiencing cancer alarm symptoms participated in the study

  • We found that several components of the doctor-patient relationship influenced perceived eligibility to seek medical help in the context of possible cancer symptoms

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Summary

Introduction

The Candidacy Framework describes how people assess their eligibility for accessing health services and how they legitimise their interaction and engagement with services [1, 2]. Candidacy has been applied to understand the different stages of a person’s journey to healthcare, incorporating numerous psychosocial factors which may influence decision-making and behaviour [1, 3,4,5]. The wide variety of severe and non-severe conditions being presented in primary care place pressure on GPs to adjudicate which patients need diagnostic investigations and specialist referrals. Patients themselves are influenced by this pressure, with some reporting that they. Tookey et al BMC Health Services Research (2018) 18:937 Stages Description

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