Form Approved
OMB No. 0920-xxxx
Expiration Date: xx/xx/xxxx
Attachment 8
Assessing Problem Areas in Referrals for Chronic Hematologic Malignancies and Developing Interventions to Address Them
Primary Care Provider Survey
(draft)
Public reporting burden of this collection of information is estimated to average 20 minutes per response, including the time for reviewing instructions, searching existing data sources, gathering and maintaining data needed, and completing and reviewing the collection of information. An agency may not conduct or sponsor, and a person is not required to respond to a collection of information unless it displays a currently valid OMB control number. Send comments regarding this burden estimate or any other aspect of this collection of information, including suggestions for reducing this burden to CDC/ATSDR Reports Clearance Officer; 1600 Clifton Road NE, MS D-74, Atlanta, Georgia 30333; ATTN: PRA (0920-XXXX)
Referrals for Chronic Hematologic Malignancies
(Draft) Primary Care Provider Survey
The Dana-Farber Cancer Institute and
the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
The CDC and its partners are studying ways to improve timeliness of care to improve patient outcomes. One area of interest is the care of patients with hematological malignancies. Your participation will help us understand the current practice patterns for these patients, and help us construct tools to help providers care for these patients in the future.
Before beginning, please review the cover letter describing the purpose of this study. All of your answers will be kept secure.
If you have any questions about this survey, please call 617-632-2304 and ask for Gregory A. Abel, MD or e-mail [email protected].
Survey Instructions
Please answer each question by choosing the answer that best describes your opinion, feelings or experience.
Answer all the questions that apply to you by marking an “X” in the box for your answer or writing in the information requested.
You are sometimes told to skip over some questions in this survey. When this happens you will see an arrow with a note that tells you what question to answer next, like this: skip to question 1
1. Which of the following specialties do you primarily practice? (Please check all that apply)
☐ Family Practice
☐ General Practice
☐ Internal Medicine
☐ Obstetrics/Gynecology
☐ Pediatrics
☐ Other: (please specify)
__________________________
2. What professional degree do you hold?
☐ Medical Doctor (MD)
☐ Doctor of Osteopathy (DO)
☐ RN with prescription privileges
☐ RN without prescription privileges
3. Do you have any board certifications or board eligibilities? (Please write in)
__________________________
__________________________
4. Are you regular faculty, adjunct faculty, have no relationship at all, or some other relationship with an academic medical center? (Please mark one)
☐ Regular faculty
☐ Adjunct faculty
☐ No Relationship
☐ Other relationship: (please specify)
__________________________
5. Does your current practice referral network include any physicians in the following specialties with whom you are on a first-name basis? (Please mark yes or no for each)
|
Yes |
No |
Hematologist |
☐ |
☐ |
Medical Oncologist |
☐ |
☐ |
Surgical Oncologist |
☐ |
☐ |
Radiation Oncologist |
☐ |
☐ |
Gynecological Surgeon |
☐ |
☐ |
Gynecological Oncologist |
☐ |
☐ |
General Surgeon |
☐ |
☐ |
6. To the best of your knowledge, in the past 12 months, what was the total number of patients for whom you provided care?
________ (number of patients)
7. To the best of your knowledge, in the past 12 months, how many patients did you see that you suspected might have a hematological malignancy?
________ (number of patients)
If you saw none skip to Part II
8.
In the past 12 months, of those patients you suspected might have
had a hematological malignancy, how many did you refer to a
specialist? (Please write in number of patients in each age group)
Less than 21 years old |
|
21-44 years old |
|
45-64 years old |
|
65 or older |
|
Part II. Signs and Symptoms
1. If you were to see a previously healthy patient during a routine physical with mild anemia (Hg 80% of normal) and no other symptoms, which of the following would you do? (Please check all that apply)
☐ Differential on CBC
☐ CT scan of chest or abdomen
☐ Fe studies
☐ B12/Folate
☐ Reticulocyte count
☐ SPEP
☐ Stool guaiac
☐ EGD
☐ Colonoscopy
☐ 2-week follow-up
☐ Referral to hematologist
☐ Referral to surgeon
☐ Reassurance
☐ Other: (please specify)
___________________________
2. If you were to see a previously healthy patient during a routine physical with non-specific constitutional symptoms (malaise and ten pound weight loss) and no other symptoms, which of the following would you do? (Please check all that apply)
☐ CBC with differential
☐ Antibiotics
☐ 2-week follow-up
☐ Stool guaiac
☐ EGD
☐ Colonoscopy
☐ CT scan of chest or abdomen
☐ Referral to hematologist
☐ Referral to surgeon
☐ Reassurance
☐ Other: (please specify)
___________________________
3. The patient with mild anemia presents two weeks later. The anemia is unchanged, but the patient has one new sign/symptom in the following list. For each of these as an isolated new finding, what would you do next? (Please check all that apply. If you would have already referred to a specialist in question 1 skip to question 4)
Sign/Symptom |
Imaging |
Follow-up in 2 weeks |
Refer to specialist |
Fever |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
Weight loss |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
Lymphadenopathy |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
Night Sweats |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
Thrombocytosis |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
Thrombocytopenia |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
Leukopenia |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
Leukocytosis |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
Non-pigmented cutaneous nodule |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
Pancytopenia |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
Patient says “I just don’t feel well…” |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
Insistent family member |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
4. The patient with non-specific constitutional symptoms (malaise and ten pound weight loss) presents two weeks later, no worse, but with one new sign/symptom in the following list. For each of these as an isolated new finding, what would you do next? (Please check all that apply. If you would have already referred to a specialist in question 2 skip to part III)
Sign/Symptom |
Imaging |
Follow-up in 2 weeks |
Refer to specialist |
Fever |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
Night sweats |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
Lymphadenopathy |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
Anemia |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
Thrombocytosis |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
Leukopenia |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
Leukocytosis |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
Polycythemia |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
Non-pigmented cutaneous nodule |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
Pancytopenia |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
Patient says “I just don’t feel well…” |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
Insistent family member |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
Part III. Flow of Referral Information
1. For hematological cases that you refer to a specialist, do you...
|
Always |
Usually |
Sometimes |
Rarely |
Never |
…write a formal referral letter to specialist? |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
…write a referral email to specialist? |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
…provide patient a copy of test results to bring to specialist? |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
…contact patient to ensure he or she attended appointment? |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
…contact specialist to follow-up on suggestions? |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
…give patient a copy of resulting consultation report? |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
2. When you receive feedback from a specialist after a referral, how often does the specialist…
|
Always |
Usually |
Sometimes |
Rarely |
Never |
…provide diagnosis? |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
…provide citations from relevant literature? |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
…provide treatment plan? |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
…assume complete care of patient? |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
…provide no feedback at all? |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
3. How often do you refer a patient you suspect may have a hematological malignancy to a hematologist or a surgeon, and find at a subsequent clinic visit…
|
Always |
Usually |
Sometimes |
Rarely |
Never |
…the patient has not been to see the specialist? |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
…your office has not arranged an appointment with the specialist? |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
…the patient has cancelled his or her appointment with the specialist? |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
4. For a chronic hematological malignancy, the ideal consult note contains: (Please choose only one)
☐ Diagnosis only
☐ Diagnosis and treatment plan only
☐ Diagnosis, treatment plan, and brief review of associated literature
☐ Diagnosis, treatment plan, and extensive literature review
☐ Diagnosis, treatment plan, literature review and invitation to take over care of the patient for the referral issue
1. When you are deciding to make a referral of a patient for evaluation for a possible hematological malignancy, on a scale of 1 to 5, how important is each of the following factors in choosing a consultant?
|
Not Important At All |
|
|
|
Extremely Important |
|
1 |
2 |
3 |
4 |
5 |
Patient preferences for site of care |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
Possibility of losing patient to specialist |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
Personal relationship with specialist |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
Availability of clinical trials at referral site |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
Distance from patient’s home to site of care |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
Reputation of specialist/facility |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
Your affiliation with that provider |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
Specialist’s affiliation with a cancer center |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
Patient’s ability to pay for specialist care |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
2. Ideally, the specialist I would choose for a patient who I suspect of having a possible chronic hematological malignancy...
|
Strongly Agree |
Disagree |
Neutral |
Agree |
Strongly Agree |
…is affiliated with a cancer center. |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
…offers the patient the opportunity to enroll in a clinical trial. |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
…takes over care of my patient as it relates to the hematological problem. |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
…has taken care of my patients before. |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
3.
Please record your level of agreement with the following statements
regarding referrals of patients with suspected hematological
malignancies.
|
Strongly Agree |
Disagree |
Neutral |
Agree |
Strongly Agree |
There is a lack of specialists to whom I can refer. |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
There is poor infrastructure to schedule or follow-up on referrals. |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
There is poor patient compliance with referrals. |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
Many of my patients cannot afford to see a specialist. |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
When I suspect a hematological problem for which there are few treatments, such as CLL or MDS, I am less likely to refer to a specialist. |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
I can recognize and diagnose most patients with chronic hematological malignancies myself. |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
I can manage most chronic hematological malignancies myself. |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
4. Please note in the space below the one most important factor that could improve the process of early diagnosis and referral of patients with hematologic malignancies.
Part V. Case Vignette One
A 63 year old [African American versus do not specify] woman presents with several weeks of fatigue and a 2.0 cm mobile mass in her cervical chain that she associates with an upper respiratory syndrome. She is otherwise well-appearing. This is her first visit for this complaint. Her CBC is normal except that her white cells are slightly elevated (12.5 k/microL) with 85% lymphocytes.
At this point, what would be the top three choices on you differential diagnosis? (Please write in)
________________________________________
________________________________________
________________________________________
2. Please answer the following questions on a scale of 1 to 5, where “1” is “extremely unlikely” and “5” is “extremely likely.”
|
Extremely Unlikely |
|
|
|
Extremely Likely |
|
1 |
2 |
3 |
4 |
5 |
How likely is it that this patient has a hematological malignancy at this time? |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
How likely is it that you would refer this patient to a surgeon? |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
How likely is it that you would refer this patient to a hematologist? |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
How likely is that this patient needs rapid diagnosis/treatment? |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
The woman is given three days of azithromycin and scheduled for follow-up in two weeks. She cancels because of a work conference and reschedules for one month later (six weeks from her last visit). At that appointment, she says the mass is smaller; however, on exam, it seems unchanged. She otherwise feels well, but you find a .5 cm “shotty” groin node on exam. A repeat CBC shows mild anemia (32.5%), normal platelets, and white cells are now 15.5 with 83% lymphocytes.
3. At this point, what would be the top three choices on your differential diagnosis? (Please write in; please write “unchanged” if they are unchanged)
________________________________________
________________________________________
________________________________________
4. Please answer the following questions on a scale of 1 to 5, where “1” is “extremely unlikely” and “5” is “extremely likely.”
|
Extremely Unlikely |
|
|
|
Extremely Likely |
|
1 |
2 |
3 |
4 |
5 |
How likely is it that this patient has a hematological malignancy at this time? |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
How likely is it that you would refer this patient to a surgeon? |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
How likely is it that you would refer this patient to a hematologist? |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
How likely is that this patient needs rapid diagnosis/treatment? |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
A [70- versus 45-] year old male with diabetes presents with a new complaint of low back pain and fatigue. He usually presents with his wife, but informs you that she died recently. A CBC shows a hematocrit of 36.7% (previously 42.2%), but is otherwise normal. Physical exam is non-revealing, and labs are stable from the prior visit, including a creatinine of 1.4. A serum protein electrophoresis shows no monoclonal protein.
1. At this point, what would be the top three choices on your differential diagnosis? (Please write in)
________________________________________
________________________________________
________________________________________
2. Please answer the following questions on a scale of 1 to 5, where “1” is “extremely unlikely” and “5” is “extremely likely.”
|
Extremely Unlikely |
|
|
|
Extremely Likely |
|
1 |
2 |
3 |
4 |
5 |
How likely is it that this patient has a hematological malignancy at this time? |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
How likely is it that you would refer this patient to a hematologist? |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
Would the presence of serious comorbidities make you more likely to refer? |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
How likely is it that this patient needs rapid diagnosis/treatment? |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
You obtain a plain film of the spine, which is read as “small lytic lesion versus bowel shadow in pelvis, follow-up imaging recommended in six months.” The test is arranged. Despite NSAIDs, the patient’s back pain becomes worse and he presents again four months later. He hasn’t been eating and expresses that he misses his wife terribly; repeat creatinine is slightly elevated at 1.6.
3. At this point, what would be the top three choices on your differential diagnosis? (Please write in, please write “unchanged” if they are unchanged)
________________________________________
________________________________________
________________________________________
4. Please answer the following questions on a scale of 1 to 5, where “1” is “extremely unlikely” and “5” is “extremely likely.”
|
Extremely Unlikely |
|
|
|
Extremely Likely |
|
1 |
2 |
3 |
4 |
5 |
How likely is it that this patient has a hematological malignancy at this time? |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
How likely is it that you would refer this patient to a hematologist? |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
Would the presence of serious comorbidities make you more likely to refer? |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
How likely is it that this patient needs rapid diagnosis/treatment? |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
☐ |
1. In what year were you born? (Please fill in year)
__________ (Year)
2. Are you… (Please mark one)
☐ Male
☐ Female
3. Are you of Hispanic of Latino origin or descent? (Please mark one)
☐ Yes, Hispanic or Latino
☐ No, not Hispanic or Latino
4. What is your race? (Please mark one or more)
☐ Black or African-American
☐ Asian
☐ White
☐ Hawaiian or Pacific Islander
☐ American Indian or Alaska Native
5. What year were you graduated from medical or nursing training? (Please fill in year)
__________ (Year)
6. In the past 12 months, what percentage of your patients were:
Less than 21 years old |
% |
21-44 years old |
% |
45-64 years old |
% |
65 or older |
% |
Total = |
100 % |
Thank you for taking the time to answer these questions!
Please return this questionnaire using the postage-paid envelope.
File Type | application/msword |
File Title | Physician Questionnaire |
Author | Information Systems |
Last Modified By | tfs4 |
File Modified | 2009-08-19 |
File Created | 2009-08-19 |