Abstract
Background
Follow-up after low-risk basal cell carcinoma (BCC) is being provided more frequently than recommended by guidelines. To design an acceptable strategy to successfully reduce this ‘low-value’ care, it is important to obtain insights into the preferences of patients and dermatologists.
Objective
To determine the preferences and needs of patients and dermatologists to reduce low-risk BCC follow-up care, and the trade-offs they are willing to make.
Methods
A questionnaire including a discrete choice experiment was created, containing attributes regarding amount of follow-up, continuity of care, method of providing addition information, type of healthcare provider, duration of follow-up visits and skin examination. In total, 371 BCC patients and all Dutch dermatologists and dermatology residents (n = 620) were invited to complete the questionnaire. A panel latent class model was used for analysis.
Results
Eighty-four dermatologists and 266 BCC patients (21% and 72% response rates respectively) completed the discrete choice experiment. If the post-treatment visit was performed by the same person as treatment provider and a hand-out was provided to patients containing personalised information, the acceptance of having no additional follow-up visits (i.e. following the guidelines) would increase from 55% to 77% by patients. Female patients and older dermatologists, however, are less willing to accept the guidelines and prefer additional follow-up visits.
Limitations
The low response rate of dermatologists.
Conclusion
This discrete choice experiment revealed a feasible strategy to substantially reduce costs, while maintaining quality of care, based on the preferences and needs of BCC patients, which is supported by dermatologists.
Publisher
Public Library of Science (PLoS)
Reference35 articles.
1. Cumulative risks and rates of subsequent basal cell carcinomas in the Netherlands;SC Flohil;Br J Dermatol,2011
2. Basal Cell Carcinoma: Pathogenesis, Epidemiology, Clinical Features, Diagnosis, Histopathology, and Management;AG Marzuka;Yale J Biol Med,2015
3. Epidemiology of basal cell carcinoma: scholarly review;JAC Verkouteren;British Journal of Dermatology,2017
4. Health system costs of skin cancer and cost-effectiveness of skin cancer prevention and screening: a systematic review;LG Gordon;European journal of cancer prevention: the official journal of the European Cancer Prevention Organisation (ECP),2015
5. Medscape’s response to the Institute of Medicine Report: Crossing the quality chasm: a new health system for the 21st century;M Leavitt;MedGenMed: Medscape general medicine,2001
Cited by
1 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献