A nationwide survey of public healthcare providers' impressions of family medicine specialists in Malaysia: A qualitative analysis of written comments

Objective: To examine impressions of public healthcare providers/professionals (PHCPs) who are working closely with family medicine specialists (FMSs) at public health clinics. Design: Cross-sectional study. Setting: This study is part of a larger national study on the perception of Malaysian public...

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Published in:BMJ Open
Main Author: Chew B.-H.; Cheong A.-T.; Ismail M.; Hamzah Z.; A-Rashid M.-R.; Md-Yasin M.; Ali N.; Mohd-Salleh N.; Bashah B.
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMJ Publishing Group 2016
Online Access:https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-84960352953&doi=10.1136%2fbmjopen-2015-009375&partnerID=40&md5=4e3b138378c9a70172a1706a4de84af7
id 2-s2.0-84960352953
spelling 2-s2.0-84960352953
Chew B.-H.; Cheong A.-T.; Ismail M.; Hamzah Z.; A-Rashid M.-R.; Md-Yasin M.; Ali N.; Mohd-Salleh N.; Bashah B.
A nationwide survey of public healthcare providers' impressions of family medicine specialists in Malaysia: A qualitative analysis of written comments
2016
BMJ Open
6
1
10.1136/bmjopen-2015-009375
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-84960352953&doi=10.1136%2fbmjopen-2015-009375&partnerID=40&md5=4e3b138378c9a70172a1706a4de84af7
Objective: To examine impressions of public healthcare providers/professionals (PHCPs) who are working closely with family medicine specialists (FMSs) at public health clinics. Design: Cross-sectional study. Setting: This study is part of a larger national study on the perception of Malaysian public healthcare professionals on FMSs (PERMFAMS). Participants: PHCPs from three categories of health facility: hospitals, health clinics and health offices. Main outcome measures: Qualitative analyses of written comments of respondents' general impression of FMSs. Results: The participants' response rate was 58.0% (780/1345), with almost equal proportions from each public healthcare facility. A total of 23 categories for each of the 648 impression comments were identified. The six emerging themes were: (1) importance of FMSs; (2) roles of FMSs; (3) clinical performance of FMSs; (4) attributes of FMSs; (5) FMS practice challenges; (6) misconception of FMS roles. Overall, FMS practice was perceived to be safe and able to provide effective treatments in a challenging medical discipline that was in line with the current standards of medical care and ethical and professional values. The areas of concern were in clinical performance expressed by PHCPs from some hospitals and the lack of personal attributes and professionalism among FMSs mentioned by PHCPs from health clinics and offices. Conclusions: FMSs were perceived to be capable of providing effective treatment and were considered to be important primary care physicians. There were a few negative impressions in some areas of FMS practice, which demanded attention by the FMSs themselves and the relevant authorities in order to improve efficiency and safeguard the fraternity's reputation.
BMJ Publishing Group
20446055
English
Article
All Open Access; Gold Open Access
author Chew B.-H.; Cheong A.-T.; Ismail M.; Hamzah Z.; A-Rashid M.-R.; Md-Yasin M.; Ali N.; Mohd-Salleh N.; Bashah B.
spellingShingle Chew B.-H.; Cheong A.-T.; Ismail M.; Hamzah Z.; A-Rashid M.-R.; Md-Yasin M.; Ali N.; Mohd-Salleh N.; Bashah B.
A nationwide survey of public healthcare providers' impressions of family medicine specialists in Malaysia: A qualitative analysis of written comments
author_facet Chew B.-H.; Cheong A.-T.; Ismail M.; Hamzah Z.; A-Rashid M.-R.; Md-Yasin M.; Ali N.; Mohd-Salleh N.; Bashah B.
author_sort Chew B.-H.; Cheong A.-T.; Ismail M.; Hamzah Z.; A-Rashid M.-R.; Md-Yasin M.; Ali N.; Mohd-Salleh N.; Bashah B.
title A nationwide survey of public healthcare providers' impressions of family medicine specialists in Malaysia: A qualitative analysis of written comments
title_short A nationwide survey of public healthcare providers' impressions of family medicine specialists in Malaysia: A qualitative analysis of written comments
title_full A nationwide survey of public healthcare providers' impressions of family medicine specialists in Malaysia: A qualitative analysis of written comments
title_fullStr A nationwide survey of public healthcare providers' impressions of family medicine specialists in Malaysia: A qualitative analysis of written comments
title_full_unstemmed A nationwide survey of public healthcare providers' impressions of family medicine specialists in Malaysia: A qualitative analysis of written comments
title_sort A nationwide survey of public healthcare providers' impressions of family medicine specialists in Malaysia: A qualitative analysis of written comments
publishDate 2016
container_title BMJ Open
container_volume 6
container_issue 1
doi_str_mv 10.1136/bmjopen-2015-009375
url https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-84960352953&doi=10.1136%2fbmjopen-2015-009375&partnerID=40&md5=4e3b138378c9a70172a1706a4de84af7
description Objective: To examine impressions of public healthcare providers/professionals (PHCPs) who are working closely with family medicine specialists (FMSs) at public health clinics. Design: Cross-sectional study. Setting: This study is part of a larger national study on the perception of Malaysian public healthcare professionals on FMSs (PERMFAMS). Participants: PHCPs from three categories of health facility: hospitals, health clinics and health offices. Main outcome measures: Qualitative analyses of written comments of respondents' general impression of FMSs. Results: The participants' response rate was 58.0% (780/1345), with almost equal proportions from each public healthcare facility. A total of 23 categories for each of the 648 impression comments were identified. The six emerging themes were: (1) importance of FMSs; (2) roles of FMSs; (3) clinical performance of FMSs; (4) attributes of FMSs; (5) FMS practice challenges; (6) misconception of FMS roles. Overall, FMS practice was perceived to be safe and able to provide effective treatments in a challenging medical discipline that was in line with the current standards of medical care and ethical and professional values. The areas of concern were in clinical performance expressed by PHCPs from some hospitals and the lack of personal attributes and professionalism among FMSs mentioned by PHCPs from health clinics and offices. Conclusions: FMSs were perceived to be capable of providing effective treatment and were considered to be important primary care physicians. There were a few negative impressions in some areas of FMS practice, which demanded attention by the FMSs themselves and the relevant authorities in order to improve efficiency and safeguard the fraternity's reputation.
publisher BMJ Publishing Group
issn 20446055
language English
format Article
accesstype All Open Access; Gold Open Access
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