• J Gen Intern Med · May 2003

    Physician perspectives on the importance of facts men ought to know about prostate-specific antigen testing.

    • Evelyn C Y Chan, Sally W Vernon, Michelle C Haynes, Frederick T O'Donnell, and Chul Ahn.
    • Division of General Internal Medicine (ECYC, FTO, CA), The University of Texas-Houston Medical School, Houston, TX, USA. Evelyn.C.Chan@uth.tmc.edu
    • J Gen Intern Med. 2003 May 1; 18 (5): 350356350-6.

    ObjectiveTo determine physicians' rating of the importance of key facts men ought to know about prostate-specific antigen (PSA) screening and whether there are differences by specialty.ParticipantsA nationwide random sample of internists, family physicians, and urologists stratified by physician specialty from The Official ABMS Directory of Board-Certified Medical Specialists 2000 Edition.MeasurementsInternists (N = 139), family physicians (N = 160), and urologists (N = 151) were asked to rate how important it is for men to know 17 facts about PSA screening using a 5-point Likert scale.Main ResultsOf 769 eligible physicians, 450 responded, for an overall response rate of 59%. Urologists and nonurologists differed in rating how important it was for men to know 9 of the 17 key facts. Eight of the nine statements that urologists and nonurologists disagreed upon concerned facts reflecting uncertainty. Nonurologists were more likely than urologists to rate facts reflecting uncertainty as highly important for men to know. These included statements about prostate cancer risk, screening with PSA, and treatment.ConclusionsDespite professional guidelines supporting informed decision making, the importance of facts men ought to know about PSA testing differ by physician specialty. Systematic differences may reflect differences in professional guidelines about PSA testing.

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