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Canadian Journal of Public Health = Revue Canadienne de Santé Publique logoLink to Canadian Journal of Public Health = Revue Canadienne de Santé Publique
. 2007 Jul 1;98(4):306–310. doi: 10.1007/BF03405409

Physician Diagnostic and Reporting Practices for Gastrointestinal Illnesses in Three Health Regions of British Columbia

Victoria L Edge 115,215,, Agricola Odoi 315, Murray Fyfe 415,515, Laura MacDougall 415, Shannon E Majowicz 115,215, Kathryn Doré 115,215, James A Flint 115, Nicole Boom 115, Pia K Muchaal 115, Paul N Sockett 115,615
PMCID: PMC6977540  PMID: 17896743

Abstract

Objectives

To estimate seasonal proportions of patient visits due to acute gastrointestinal illness (GI), assess factors influencing physicians’ stool sample requests, their understanding of laboratory testing protocols and adherence to provincial stool request guidelines in three British Columbia (BC) health regions.

Methods

During a one-year period, eligible physicians were mailed four self-administered questionnaires used to estimate proportions of patients diagnosed with GI, related stool sample requests in the preceding month, and to assess factors prompting stool sample requests.

Results

The response rate overall for the initial comprehensive questionnaire was 18.6%; 7.4% responded to all four questionnaires. An estimated 2.5% of patient visits had a GI diagnosis; of these, 24.8% were asked to submit stool samples. Significant (p<0.05) regional and seasonal variations were found in rates of GI and stool sample requests. Top-ranked factors prompting stool sample requests were: bloody diarrhoea, recent overseas travel, immunocompromised status, and duration of illness >7 days; “non-patient” factors included: laboratory availability, time to receive laboratory results, and cost. Physicians’ perceptions of which organisms were tested for in a ‘routine’ stool culture varied.

Interpretation

BC physicians appear to adhere to existing standardized guidelines for sample requests. This may result in systematic under-representation of certain diseases in reportable communicable disease statistics.

MeSH terms: Gastrointestinal diseases, physician practices, gastroenteritis, infectious disease reporting, surveillance

Footnotes

Acknowledgements: This work was supported by the Public Health Agency of Canada. We wish to thank the British Columbia Centres for Disease Control, Valencia Remple, and the Medical Officers of Health for each participating health region (Drs. P. Daly (Vancouver Coastal Health Authority), J. Lu (Interior Health Authority) and L. Medd (Northern Health Authority)) for their support of this project.

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