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. 2014 Mar 4;4(3):e004439.
doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2013-004439.

'Timely' diagnosis of dementia: what does it mean? A narrative analysis of GPs' accounts

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'Timely' diagnosis of dementia: what does it mean? A narrative analysis of GPs' accounts

Saadia Aziz Dhedhi et al. BMJ Open. .

Abstract

Objective: To explore general practitioners' (GP) perspectives on the meaning of 'timeliness' in dementia diagnosis.

Design: Narrative interview study.

Setting: UK academic department of primary care.

Participants: Seven practising GPs with experience of conveying a diagnosis of dementia.

Methods: GPs' narrative commentaries of encounters with patients with suspected dementia were audio-recorded and transcribed resulting in 51 pages of text (26 757words). A detailed narrative analysis of doctors' accounts was conducted.

Results: Diagnosis of dementia is a complex medical and social practice. Clinicians attend to multiple competing priorities while providing individually tailored patient care, against a background of shifting political and institutional concerns. Interviewees drew on a range of explanations about the nature of generalism to legitimise their claims about whether and how they made a diagnosis, constructing their accounts of what constituted 'timeliness'. Three interlinked analytical themes were identified: (1) diagnosis as a collective, cumulative, contingent process; (2) taking care to ensure that diagnosis-if reached at all-is opportune; (3) diagnosis of dementia as constitutive or consequential, but also a diagnosis whose consequences are unpredictable.

Conclusions: Timeliness in the diagnosis of dementia involves balancing a range of judgements and is not experienced in terms of simple chronological notions of time. Reluctance or failure to make a diagnosis on a particular occasion does not necessarily point to GPs' lack of awareness of current policies, or to a set of training needs, but commonly reflects this range of nuanced balancing judgements, often negotiated with patients and their families with detailed attention to a particular context. In the case of dementia, the taken-for-granted benefits of early diagnosis cannot be assumed, but need to be 'worked through' on an individual case-by-case basis. GPs tend to value 'rightness' of time over concerns about 'early' diagnosis.

Keywords: Primary Care; Qualitative Research.

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Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
Topic guide for narrative interviews.

References

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