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‘Diagnostic downshift’: clinical and system consequences of extrapolating secondary care testing tactics to primary care
- Source :
- BMJ Evidence-Based Medicine. 27:141-148
- Publication Year :
- 2021
- Publisher :
- BMJ, 2021.
-
Abstract
- Numerous drivers push specialist diagnostic approaches down to primary care (‘diagnostic downshift’), intuitively welcomed by clinicians and patients. However, primary care’s different population and processes result in under-recognised, unintended consequences. Testing performs poorer in primary care, with indication creep due to earlier, more undifferentiated presentation and reduced accuracy due to spectrum bias and the ‘false-positive paradox’. In low-prevalence settings, tests without near-100% specificity have their useful yield eclipsed by greater incidental or false-positive findings. Ensuing cascades and multiplier effects can generate clinician workload, patient anxiety, further low-value tests, referrals, treatments and a potentially nocebic population ‘disease’ burden of unclear benefit. Increased diagnostics earlier in pathways can burden patients and stretch general practice (GP) workloads, inducing downstream service utilisation and unintended ‘market failure’ effects. Evidence is tenuous for reducing secondary care referrals, providing patient reassurance or meaningfully improving clinical outcomes. Subsequently, inflated investment in per capita testing, at a lower level in a healthcare system, may deliver diminishing or even negative economic returns. Test cost poorly represents ‘value’, neglecting under-recognised downstream consequences, which must be balanced against therapeutic yield. With lower positive predictive values, more tests are required per true diagnosis and cost-effectiveness is rarely robust. With fixed secondary care capacity, novel primary care testing is an added cost pressure, rarely reducing hospital activity. GP testing strategies require real-world evaluation, in primary care populations, of all downstream consequences. Test formularies should be scrutinised in view of the setting of care, with interventions to focus rational testing towards those with higher pretest probabilities, while improving interpretation and communication of results.
- Subjects :
- medicine.medical_specialty
Cost-Benefit Analysis
General Practice
Population
Psychological intervention
Disease
Secondary Care
03 medical and health sciences
0302 clinical medicine
Predictive Value of Tests
Spectrum bias
Per capita
medicine
Humans
030212 general & internal medicine
Formulary
Intensive care medicine
education
education.field_of_study
Primary Health Care
business.industry
Unintended consequences
Workload
General Medicine
030220 oncology & carcinogenesis
business
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 25154478 and 2515446X
- Volume :
- 27
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- BMJ Evidence-Based Medicine
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....9fd2be2535497a4be596e7d148857bce