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Free-text analysis of general practice out-of-hours (GPOOH) use by people with advanced cancer : an analysis of coded and uncoded free-text data

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Date
23/01/2023
Author
Mills, Sarah
Brown-Kerr, Alana
Buchanan, Deans
Donnan, Peter T.
Smith, Blair H.
Keywords
General practice
After-hours care
Cancer
Care
Palliative
Terminal care
Pain
RC0254 Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology (including Cancer)
RM Therapeutics. Pharmacology
3rd-DAS
MCP
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Abstract
Background  People with advanced cancer frequently use the GP out-of-hours (GPOOH) service. Considerable amounts of routine GPOOH data are uncoded. Therefore, these data are omitted from existing healthcare datasets. Aim  To conduct a free-text analysis of a GPOOH dataset, to identify reasons for attendance and care delivered through GPOOH to people with advanced cancer. Design and setting  An analysis of a GPOOH healthcare dataset was undertaken. It contained all coded and free- text information for 5749 attendances from a cohort of 2443 people who died from cancer in Tayside, Scotland, from 2013–2015. Method  Random sampling methods selected 575 consultations for free-text analysis. Each consultation was analysed by two independent reviewers to determine the following: assigned presenting complaints; key and additional palliative care symptoms recorded in free text; evidence of anticipatory care planning; and free-text recording of dispensed medications. Inter-rater reliability concordance was established through Kappa testing. Results  More than half of all coded reasons for attendance (n = 293; 51.0%) were ‘other’ or ‘missing’. Free-text analysis demonstrated that nearly half (n = 284; 49.4%) of GPOOH attendances by people with advanced cancer were for pain or palliative care. More than half of GPOOH attendances (n = 325; 56.5%) recorded at least one key or additional palliative care symptom in free text, with the commonest being breathlessness, vomiting, cough, and nausea. Anticipatory care planning was poorly recorded in both coded and uncoded records. Uncoded medications were dispensed in more than one- quarter of GPOOH consultations. Conclusion  GPOOH delivers a substantial amount of pain management and palliative care, much of which is uncoded. Therefore, it is unrecognised and under-reported in existing large healthcare data analyses.
Citation
Mills , S , Brown-Kerr , A , Buchanan , D , Donnan , P T & Smith , B H 2023 , ' Free-text analysis of general practice out-of-hours (GPOOH) use by people with advanced cancer : an analysis of coded and uncoded free-text data ' , British Journal of General Practice , vol. Online first . https://doi.org/10.3399/BJGP.2022.0084
Publication
British Journal of General Practice
Status
Peer reviewed
DOI
https://doi.org/10.3399/BJGP.2022.0084
ISSN
0960-1643
Type
Journal article
Rights
Copyright © The Authors http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This article is Open Access: CC BY 4.0 licence (http://creativecommons.org/licences/by/4.0/).
Description
Funding: SM’s position was funded through the Chief Scientist Office (CAF_17_06) through a Clinical Academic Fellowship. PATCH Scotland and Tayside Oncology Research Foundation Research Grants provided funding for data collection and storage.
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  • University of St Andrews Research
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/10023/26827

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