학술논문

Primary Care Providers and Nonalcoholic Fatty Liver Disease: A Needs Assessment Survey
Document Type
article
Source
Digestive Diseases and Sciences. 68(2)
Subject
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences
Clinical Sciences
Digestive Diseases
Liver Disease
Chronic Liver Disease and Cirrhosis
Health Services
Clinical Research
Oral and gastrointestinal
Humans
Non-alcoholic Fatty Liver Disease
Cross-Sectional Studies
Needs Assessment
Surveys and Questionnaires
Primary Health Care
Fibrosis
Liver Cirrhosis
NAFLD
Primary care
Implementation science
Fatty liver
Noninvasive fibrosis assessment
Gastroenterology & Hepatology
Clinical sciences
Language
Abstract
BackgroundPrimary care providers (PCPs) face increasing numbers of patients at risk for NAFLD and are responsible for the detection of NAFLD and the decision on referral to specialists. We conducted a PCP needs assessment to ascertain the barriers and desired supports for NAFLD in primary care.MethodsWe designed a cross-sectional study of PCPs at a large diverse health system and surveyed faculty, residents, and nurse practitioners. Questions assessed NAFLD knowledge, approach to diagnosis and fibrosis testing including use of FIB-4, and attitudes toward support tools.ResultsThe survey was sent to 115 PCPs with an 80% (n = 92) response rate. Respondents were 52% faculty and 48% residents. Over 40% were unsure of which diagnostic tests to order and which data constituted a diagnosis. PCPs were aware of the importance of fibrosis, yet few knew the components of FIB-4, few used FIB-4 in practice, and yet the most common reason for referral was to obtain fibrosis staging. The majority showed high levels of interest toward possible tools to improve NAFLD management, and only 5% perceived lack of time to be a barrier.DiscussionOur survey revealed PCPs need and want strategic approaches to NAFLD. We found PCPs lack confidence in diagnosing NAFLD and are inconsistent in management strategies. PCPs had high awareness of the importance of fibrosis, but not of the FIB-4. It was encouraging that PCPs reported that time was not a major barrier and had positive attitudes toward potential practice support tools, indicating that practice guidelines designed for primary care should be created.