Fitting a square peg into a round hole: Perceptions of Appalachian physicians on the incorporation of chronic disease prevention into their practice
This study used a focus group in August 2017 (n = 9) to explore the perceptions of rural physicians to a state request to incorporate diabetes prevention screening into their West Virginia medical practice. Analysis of the data revealed that the participants did not think private physicians were equ...
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doaj-6d868fa3b7d94d92b098015697cb73552020-11-25T02:16:17ZengElsevierPreventive Medicine Reports2211-33552018-09-0111216220Fitting a square peg into a round hole: Perceptions of Appalachian physicians on the incorporation of chronic disease prevention into their practiceLauri Andress0Danny Scalise1Jessica G. Wright2Stephanie E. Moore3Department of Health Policy, Management & Leadership, West Virginia University Robert C. Byrd Health Sciences Center, School of Public Health, United States; Corresponding author.West Virginia Medical State Association, 4307 MacCorkle Avenue, Chaleston, WV 25304, United StatesDivision of Health Promotion and Chronic Disease, WV Bureau for Public Health, 350 Capitol Street Room 514, Charleston, WV 25301, United StatesDivision of Health Promotion and Chronic Disease, WV Bureau for Public Health, 350 Capitol Street Room 514, Charleston, WV 25301, United StatesThis study used a focus group in August 2017 (n = 9) to explore the perceptions of rural physicians to a state request to incorporate diabetes prevention screening into their West Virginia medical practice. Analysis of the data revealed that the participants did not think private physicians were equipped to incorporate diabetes prevention programming into their practice. Three categories emerged from the data analysis to explain the reasoning of the health practitioners on the incorporation of pre-diabetes screening and management into their practice. ⁎ The practice of medicine ⁎ Prevention is a mismatch ⁎ Social determinants of healthIn the end, the study revealed that a request for physicians to identify and refer at risk patients to a diabetes prevention program is problematic due to conceptual and structural issues. Based on the findings it does not appear at this time that private physicians in rural settings can incorporate diabetes prevention into their existing practice. To address conceptual and structural barriers the invitation to rural physicians must: 1) present evidence on how physicians may be effective in a diabetes management team; 2) include a model that demonstrates a limited, specific role and duties for the physician within a team setting; and last, 3) integrate physicians into an existing community-based network of social and human service providers set up to provide diabetes prevention services. Keywords: Rural, Prevention, Diabetes, Physician perceptionshttp://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2211335518300986 |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Lauri Andress Danny Scalise Jessica G. Wright Stephanie E. Moore |
spellingShingle |
Lauri Andress Danny Scalise Jessica G. Wright Stephanie E. Moore Fitting a square peg into a round hole: Perceptions of Appalachian physicians on the incorporation of chronic disease prevention into their practice Preventive Medicine Reports |
author_facet |
Lauri Andress Danny Scalise Jessica G. Wright Stephanie E. Moore |
author_sort |
Lauri Andress |
title |
Fitting a square peg into a round hole: Perceptions of Appalachian physicians on the incorporation of chronic disease prevention into their practice |
title_short |
Fitting a square peg into a round hole: Perceptions of Appalachian physicians on the incorporation of chronic disease prevention into their practice |
title_full |
Fitting a square peg into a round hole: Perceptions of Appalachian physicians on the incorporation of chronic disease prevention into their practice |
title_fullStr |
Fitting a square peg into a round hole: Perceptions of Appalachian physicians on the incorporation of chronic disease prevention into their practice |
title_full_unstemmed |
Fitting a square peg into a round hole: Perceptions of Appalachian physicians on the incorporation of chronic disease prevention into their practice |
title_sort |
fitting a square peg into a round hole: perceptions of appalachian physicians on the incorporation of chronic disease prevention into their practice |
publisher |
Elsevier |
series |
Preventive Medicine Reports |
issn |
2211-3355 |
publishDate |
2018-09-01 |
description |
This study used a focus group in August 2017 (n = 9) to explore the perceptions of rural physicians to a state request to incorporate diabetes prevention screening into their West Virginia medical practice. Analysis of the data revealed that the participants did not think private physicians were equipped to incorporate diabetes prevention programming into their practice. Three categories emerged from the data analysis to explain the reasoning of the health practitioners on the incorporation of pre-diabetes screening and management into their practice. ⁎ The practice of medicine ⁎ Prevention is a mismatch ⁎ Social determinants of healthIn the end, the study revealed that a request for physicians to identify and refer at risk patients to a diabetes prevention program is problematic due to conceptual and structural issues. Based on the findings it does not appear at this time that private physicians in rural settings can incorporate diabetes prevention into their existing practice. To address conceptual and structural barriers the invitation to rural physicians must: 1) present evidence on how physicians may be effective in a diabetes management team; 2) include a model that demonstrates a limited, specific role and duties for the physician within a team setting; and last, 3) integrate physicians into an existing community-based network of social and human service providers set up to provide diabetes prevention services. Keywords: Rural, Prevention, Diabetes, Physician perceptions |
url |
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2211335518300986 |
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