Complexity in general practice
Uncertainty and unpredictability are features of general practice despite all efforts to decrease them by guidelines and decision support tools. A great many medical problems are simple or complicated, and guidelines support GPs to find the best solutions. In cases with multimorbidity, however, medical problems are complex and not easy to deal with. In simple… read more
Gut feelings of the general practitioner when confronted with dyspnoea and/or chest pain: a prospective observational study
Objective Dealing with uncertainty is an important part of the decision-making process of general practitioners (GPs). Research shows GPs think âgut feelingsâ are a relevant phenomenon in the context of this decision-making process. A questionnaire was developed to determine the presence or absence of gut feelings in diagnostic reasoning. Chest pain and shortness of breath… read more
GPsâ suspicion of child abuse: how does it arise and what is the follow-up?
Background: Child abuse is widespread, occurs in all cultures and communities, remains undiscovered in 90% of cases and has serious long-term effects. Physicians generally underidentify and underreport child abuse. To understand this low reporting rate and how the suspicion of child abuse arises, we examined GPsâ experiences. Research questions: How does the suspicion of child… read more
Accuracy of the general practitionerâs sense of alarm when confronted with dyspnoea and/or chest pain: a prospective observational study
Abstract Objectives Dyspnoea and chest pain are symptoms shared with multiple pathologies ranging from the benign to life-threatening diseases. A Gut Feelings Questionnaire (GFQ) has been validated to measure the general practitionerâs (GPs) sense of alarm or sense of reassurance. The aim of the study was to estimate the diagnostic test accuracy of GPsâ sense… read more
Prevalence and diagnostic value of GPsâ gut feelings for cancer and serious diseases: protocol for a prospective observational study of diagnostic validity
Abstract Introduction Cancer diagnosis in primary care is an important challenge for general practitioners (GPs) due to the relatively low frequency of any single type of cancer and the heterogeneous signs and symptoms that can be present. In addition to analytical reasoning, GPs may become aware of gut feelings (GFs) as they suspect that a… read more
Linguistic validation of the gut feelings questionnaire in Ukraine
Background: Medical clinical decisions is based on combination of analytical and non-analytic thinking. The concept of âgut feeling questionnaireâ (GFQ) in GP was described through qualitative research of both sensations of alarm and assurance. The investigated enquirer has been validated in 5 countries. Research questions: Linguistic validation of the European GFQ translated from English into… read more
Report of the last COGITA meeting (Tampere, 2019, May 9th)
We had a very valuable and nice meeting in Tampere (Finland). In the morning, a number of empirical studies were presented as well as an epistemological study about uncertainty. In the afternoon, we extensively discussed a proposal to apply for an EU COST project subsidy. The participants were from France, Spain, Belgium, Ukraine, Finland, Estonia,… read more
Marie Barais is the coordinator of the COGITA network group
May 2019. Marie Barais is the coordinator of the European network group of gut feelings researchers, called COGITA. Last year, in Antwerp (Belgium), Marie defended successfully her PhD entitled ‘The sense of alarm as a tool preventing error in primary care’. Her email adress: mariebarais@gmail.com
How does child abuse suspicion arise in general practice?
Accepted abstract EGPRN Tampere 2019 by Erik Stolper, Jan Paul Verdenius, Geert Jan Dinant, Margje van de Wiel Background Child abuse is wide spread, occurs in all cultures and communities and remains undiscovered in 90% of the cases. 80% of reported child abuse concerns emotional ill-treatment. In the Netherlands, at least 3% (118.000) of children… read more
Quantitative and thematic analysis of gut feelingsâ text notes
Abstract accepted for poster presentation at the EGPRN-conference (Tampere, Finland, 2019) Bernardino Oliva-Fanlo, SebastiĂ March, Cristina Gadea, Erik Stolper, Magdalena Esteva Background: GPs use gut feelings (GF) during a patient visit to pace their decisions. A ‘sense of alarm’ (SA) means that intervention seems necessary to prevent imminent serious health problems, and a ‘sense of… read more