Urgent Direct Access to Diagnostic Services for General Practitioners: Bridging the Gap in Cancer Diagnosis

Roji Gurung, Anna Podlasek

    Research output: Contribution to journalReview articlepeer-review

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    Abstract

    Urgent direct access to diagnostic services for general practitioners (GPs) is a new pathway to capture any cancer diagnoses that may have been missed due to vague symptom presentations. Hence, GPs should look out for the key symptoms mentioned by NHS England that should prompt urgent direct access referrals for chest X-ray (CXR), computed tomography (CT) chest, MRI brain, ultrasound (US) abdomen and pelvis, and CT abdomen and pelvis. By implementing this approach, we can significantly reduce the time to diagnosis, while minimizing the number of visits to GP and specialist appointments prior to initiating investigations. However, the use of this pathway can only improve if access to diagnostic scans is improved. This needs to be done by ensuring all GPs in the country have access to directly request MRI brains, CT chest, abdomen, and pelvis. Further research into the impact of the urgent direct access pathway as well as investigating the number of GPs without access to these vital diagnostic services is required to fully improve and measure the progress of this referral pathway.

    Original languageEnglish
    Article numbere63350
    JournalCureus
    Volume16
    Issue number6
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 28 Jun 2024

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