Patients’ Experiences, Expectations, Motivations, and Perspectives around Urinary Tract Infection Care in General Practice: A Qualitative Interview Study
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Results
2.1. Experienced versus Unexperienced Patients
2.2. Patient’s Lack of Knowledge
2.3. Patients Feeling Understood
3. Discussion
3.1. Summary
3.2. Strengths and Limitations
3.3. Comparison with Existing Literature
3.4. Implications for Practice
4. Materials and Methods
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
- ◦
- What do patients do at home before they contact their GP?
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- Why do patients decide to call their GP?
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- When do patients decide to call their GP?
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- What do patients think of triage by telephone?
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- Who is able to estimate the severity of the symptoms most accurately?
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- Are patients open to the advice of triagists?
- ◦
- Do patients follow the advice of triagists or is only a doctor able to convince them?
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- Do patients visit the GP against the advice of the triagist? Why?
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- What do patients expect from their GP during consultation?
- ◦
- Do patients dare to ask specifically what they want to know?
- ◦
- How do patients experience a consultation at the GP?
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- Do the advice or the actions of the GP scare the patients?
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- What do patients think of the fact that a different doctor will see them at the out-of-hours centre?
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- What information do patients obtain from their GP during consultation?
- ◦
- What information do patients miss?
- ◦
- What information would patients find important to obtain when they experience a possible UTI?
- ◦
- When are patients satisfied?
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- What causes patients to be satisfied with the consultation?
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- What reassures patients?
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- What causes patients to re-consult?
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- Do patients apply information obtained during a possible future UTI?
- ◦
- Does this influence the choice to consult earlier/later in a later episode?
- ◦
- How can UTI consults be improved according to patients?
References
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Interview | Age (Years) | Education | Lifetime Frequency of UTI |
---|---|---|---|
1 | 40 | University | ≥3 times |
2 | 23 | Intermediate vocational education | ≥3 times |
3 | 37 | Intermediate vocational education | ≥3 times |
4 | 78 | Secondary education | ≥3 times |
5 | 37 | University | ≥3 times |
6 | 28 | Intermediate vocational education | ≥3 times |
7 | 36 | Higher vocational education | <3 times |
8 | 32 | University | ≥3 times |
9 | 30 | Higher vocational education | <3 times |
10 | 57 | Intermediate vocational education | <3 times |
11 | 69 | University | <3 times |
12 | 54 | Intermediate vocational education | <3 times |
13 | 23 | University | <3 times |
14 | 51 | University | <3 times |
Theme | Topic | Interview | Quote |
---|---|---|---|
Experienced versus inexperienced patients | Atypical symptoms of experienced patients | 4 | Patient: “Well I don’t actually feel anything, I just feel a kind of shiver when I have to pee. I don’t have to go more often, don’t feel any pressure, also don’t feel any pain. Only a strange feeling when I have to pee….” |
Moment of contacting GP for inexperienced patients, motivation for contacting for inexperienced patients I | 14 | Patient: “First I started Googling that Sunday; like what’s actually wrong with me. Quite quickly, I got the idea: I think this is an acute bladder infection. And then I immediately called the GP on Monday.” Interviewer: “Were the complaints the primary reason for you to call, or was it more that you knew that it was a cystitis that made you get in touch with the GP?” Patient: “The complaints. I thought: “I have to walk my dog, I have to do groceries, I have get something to get off the couch again.” | |
Moment of contacting GP for experienced patients I, motivation for contacting for experienced patients I | 13 | Patient: “I actually knew that I simply had a bladder infection and needed a course of antibiotics.” Interviewer: “How did you know?” Patient: “I recognised the symptoms from 3 years ago.” | |
Moment of contacting GP for experienced patients II, motivation for contacting for experienced patients I | 1 | Patient: “I know that it [the dipstick test] will turn out positive once there is blood in my urine. So that’s what I wait for.” … “And I know that when I hand this [my urine] in I’ll get my antibiotics. In fact, sometimes I use that [knowledge] by drinking less and by putting more pressure on my bladder when I pee.” | |
Inexperienced patient on UTI diagnostics, motivation for contacting for inexperienced patients II | 7 | Patient: “I’m not a doctor or GP, so I need them to diagnose, I am unable to do that myself. So if he deems it [the diagnostic test] necessary then I just do it.” Interviewer: “… Was getting the diagnosis the most important reason for you to consult?” Patient: “Well, I just really wanted to get rid of the symptoms.” | |
Experienced patient on UTI diagnostics | 1 | Interviewer: “You already indicated yourself that you only visit [the GP] when you think that the urine will turn out positive. Is your urine always tested when you consult your practice?” Patient: “Always! Even if I’m crying at the counter begging that it’s absolutely unnecessary and that I’m definitely sure [that I have a bladder infection]. Without it [handing in urine], I will never ever get antibiotics.” Interviewer: “How do you feel about that?” Patient: “I think it’s a good development. It’s a huge difference compared to 20 years ago, you can tell that a lot has really changed there, in general I think. It is also different with animals now, I have a lot of pets and in the past you got antibiotics for everything and were allowed to powder and pulverize it yourself, but here I can tell that people understand that it’s not the way to go about it.” | |
Patients’ lack of knowledge | Self-help advice I, antibiotics I | 14 | Patient: “In any case, more information on what I can do myself. What could alleviate it [the symptoms]? Does the medication actually help immediately, or could you wait for a day? So more information.” |
UTI in general, self-help advice II | 14 | Interviewer: “And did you receive any additional explanation about your bladder infection?” Patient: “No.” Interviewer: “Would that be something you want? Tips, advice, an explanation?” Patient: “No, I wouldn’t. However, there were a lot of people in my environment that offered me advice. Like cranberries, but I didn’t take them seriously.” … “because people also just get their tips from somewhere, their grandmother, or on Facebook... However, I am genuinely curious about cranberries.” | |
Self-help advice III | 12 | Interviewer: “Just now we discussed cranberry juice, of which you doubt whether it’s effective. Where would you look for this information?” Patient: “Nowadays you start on the internet of course, Google, very straightforward. But when you get into it a bit you’ll find many different opinions, therefore my second place to look for information is still the GP.” | |
Pain medication I | 14 | Patient: “It’s a different type of symptom, I use them [painkillers] for headaches or neck pain, but not for urinary tract pain. That’s not something that comes to mind.” | |
Pain medication II | 5 | Patient: “I maybe use paracetamol once a year.” Interviewer: “Also during a bladder infection?” Patient: “No, because I don’t feel any pain in that case.” | |
Antibiotics II | 5 | Patient: “They [the GP or the pharmacist] don’t tell you anything but you still have to pay for it every time. And then I get the idea, they are just like: madam has had this antibiotic for a year now, it has almost been a year so we can’t charge 6 euros for that so we just give something else for now, that’s the idea I have. That’s probably not the case, it’s probably that this antibiotic works on this bacterium, but they don’t tell you that.” | |
Antibiotics III | 10 | Patient: “The side effects; you know that on the third or fourth day, that maybe differs from patient to patient, that your stool possibly might come out a little faster due to the antibiotics, that it becomes a little thinner. That is what I’ve come to expect from an antibiotic course, then I just imagine that my body is cleansed in the process as well.” | |
Patients feeling understood | Difference in perception of disease severity I | 7 | Patient: “I liked that they took me so seriously even though they probably had something like it’s just a bladder infection, ma’am don’t go like that, you’re not dying. But in my eyes, because I’ve never had it [a UTI] before, I thought what happened here, so I liked that I was taken so seriously.” |
Influence on treatment choice | 4 | Interviewer: “Was there a difference between the antibiotics you got?” Patient: “Last time it was a sachet with one dose, the Furabid I have to take for a week.” Interviewer: “Which do you prefer?” Patient: “The sachet with a single dose.” Interviewer: “And why do you prefer that one?” Patient: “Because you don’t have to think about it anymore….” | |
Importance of diagnostics | 10 | Interviewer: “Suppose that the next time you visit a GP the doctor says: ‘You don’t have the typical pain or burning sensation during urination, I am in doubt whether this is a bladder infection.’ What would be your reaction?” Patient: “Then I’ll ask if they would check my urine anyway.” Interviewer: “So the test has a lot of diagnostic value for you?” Patient: “Yes, … I’m not going to walk around with questions. It’s either ‘yes’ or ‘no’ and ‘you have to do this’ or ‘you have to do that’, but not ‘just figure it out’.” | |
Difference in perception of disease severity II | 9 | Patient: “I did think that I was given rather little information about ‘how’ and ‘what’, but I do understand it. It is a very common complaint in women of course, so I also think that they thought something like: ‘oh this is normal and this is a very common problem.” |
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Cox, S.; Vleeming, M.; Giorgi, W.; Dinant, G.-J.; Cals, J.; de Bont, E. Patients’ Experiences, Expectations, Motivations, and Perspectives around Urinary Tract Infection Care in General Practice: A Qualitative Interview Study. Antibiotics 2023, 12, 241. https://doi.org/10.3390/antibiotics12020241
Cox S, Vleeming M, Giorgi W, Dinant G-J, Cals J, de Bont E. Patients’ Experiences, Expectations, Motivations, and Perspectives around Urinary Tract Infection Care in General Practice: A Qualitative Interview Study. Antibiotics. 2023; 12(2):241. https://doi.org/10.3390/antibiotics12020241
Chicago/Turabian StyleCox, Stefan, Maud Vleeming, Wesley Giorgi, Geert-Jan Dinant, Jochen Cals, and Eefje de Bont. 2023. "Patients’ Experiences, Expectations, Motivations, and Perspectives around Urinary Tract Infection Care in General Practice: A Qualitative Interview Study" Antibiotics 12, no. 2: 241. https://doi.org/10.3390/antibiotics12020241
APA StyleCox, S., Vleeming, M., Giorgi, W., Dinant, G. -J., Cals, J., & de Bont, E. (2023). Patients’ Experiences, Expectations, Motivations, and Perspectives around Urinary Tract Infection Care in General Practice: A Qualitative Interview Study. Antibiotics, 12(2), 241. https://doi.org/10.3390/antibiotics12020241