The use of neuroimaging in dementia by Irish general practitioners

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

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The use of neuroimaging in dementia by Irish general practitioners. / Ciblis, A S; Butler, M-L; Bokde, A L W et al.
In: Irish Journal of Medical Science, Vol. 185, No. 3, 08.2016, p. 597-602.

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

HarvardHarvard

Ciblis, AS, Butler, M-L, Bokde, ALW, Mullins, PG & McNulty, JP 2016, 'The use of neuroimaging in dementia by Irish general practitioners', Irish Journal of Medical Science, vol. 185, no. 3, pp. 597-602. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11845-015-1315-4

APA

Ciblis, A. S., Butler, M.-L., Bokde, A. L. W., Mullins, P. G., & McNulty, J. P. (2016). The use of neuroimaging in dementia by Irish general practitioners. Irish Journal of Medical Science, 185(3), 597-602. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11845-015-1315-4

CBE

Ciblis AS, Butler M-L, Bokde ALW, Mullins PG, McNulty JP. 2016. The use of neuroimaging in dementia by Irish general practitioners. Irish Journal of Medical Science. 185(3):597-602. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11845-015-1315-4

MLA

Ciblis, A S et al. "The use of neuroimaging in dementia by Irish general practitioners". Irish Journal of Medical Science. 2016, 185(3). 597-602. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11845-015-1315-4

VancouverVancouver

Ciblis AS, Butler ML, Bokde ALW, Mullins PG, McNulty JP. The use of neuroimaging in dementia by Irish general practitioners. Irish Journal of Medical Science. 2016 Aug;185(3):597-602. Epub 2015 Jun 6. doi: 10.1007/s11845-015-1315-4

Author

Ciblis, A S ; Butler, M-L ; Bokde, A L W et al. / The use of neuroimaging in dementia by Irish general practitioners. In: Irish Journal of Medical Science. 2016 ; Vol. 185, No. 3. pp. 597-602.

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - The use of neuroimaging in dementia by Irish general practitioners

AU - Ciblis, A S

AU - Butler, M-L

AU - Bokde, A L W

AU - Mullins, P G

AU - McNulty, J P

PY - 2016/8

Y1 - 2016/8

N2 - BACKGROUND: More than 48,000 people in Ireland are living with dementia, and the number is likely to rise to 130,000 by 2041. Dementia frequently remains undiagnosed, depriving many of early interventions and the opportunity to plan for the future. Neuroimaging is helpful in the diagnosis of dementia, yet it is often insufficiently utilised. General practitioners (GPs) often decide which patients should be referred on for specialist assessment and as such play a crucial role in dementia diagnosis.AIMS: To establish the accessibility of neuroimaging in dementia by GPs, current referral patterns, confidence in referral and opinions on radiology reports.METHODS: The research design was a postal survey among GPs in single and group practices in urban, rural and semi-rural areas in the east and southeast of Ireland. GPs were identified from the Irish Medical Directory and posted individual anonymous questionnaires.RESULTS: A third of participants reported that they had no direct access to neuroimaging. Access differed between public and private patients. GPs primarily referred to computed tomography and magnetic resonance imaging, but only 14.6 % based these referrals on published guidelines. A total of 47.8 % of participants were not very confident in their ability to choose the most appropriate modality.CONCLUSION: Access to neuroimaging investigations for suspected cases of dementia varies between locations and public and private systems. To improve diagnostic rates and ensure appropriate utilisation of imaging resources, GPs require access to clinical and referral guidelines to ensure appropriate use of neuroimaging and the best possible patient outcomes.

AB - BACKGROUND: More than 48,000 people in Ireland are living with dementia, and the number is likely to rise to 130,000 by 2041. Dementia frequently remains undiagnosed, depriving many of early interventions and the opportunity to plan for the future. Neuroimaging is helpful in the diagnosis of dementia, yet it is often insufficiently utilised. General practitioners (GPs) often decide which patients should be referred on for specialist assessment and as such play a crucial role in dementia diagnosis.AIMS: To establish the accessibility of neuroimaging in dementia by GPs, current referral patterns, confidence in referral and opinions on radiology reports.METHODS: The research design was a postal survey among GPs in single and group practices in urban, rural and semi-rural areas in the east and southeast of Ireland. GPs were identified from the Irish Medical Directory and posted individual anonymous questionnaires.RESULTS: A third of participants reported that they had no direct access to neuroimaging. Access differed between public and private patients. GPs primarily referred to computed tomography and magnetic resonance imaging, but only 14.6 % based these referrals on published guidelines. A total of 47.8 % of participants were not very confident in their ability to choose the most appropriate modality.CONCLUSION: Access to neuroimaging investigations for suspected cases of dementia varies between locations and public and private systems. To improve diagnostic rates and ensure appropriate utilisation of imaging resources, GPs require access to clinical and referral guidelines to ensure appropriate use of neuroimaging and the best possible patient outcomes.

KW - Dementia

KW - General Practice

KW - Neuroimaging

KW - Access

KW - Diagnosis

U2 - 10.1007/s11845-015-1315-4

DO - 10.1007/s11845-015-1315-4

M3 - Article

C2 - 26048643

VL - 185

SP - 597

EP - 602

JO - Irish Journal of Medical Science

JF - Irish Journal of Medical Science

SN - 0021-1265

IS - 3

ER -