Petriček Goranka, Klemenc-Ketiš Zalika, Ožvačić Adžić Zlata, Cerovečki Venija, Willems Sara, Tsimtsiou Zoi, Zelko Erika, Collins Claire, Hoffmann Kathryn, Eide Torunn Bjerve, Ares Blanco Sara, Frese Thomas, Lingner Heidrun, Assenova Radost, Torzsa Péter, Seifert Bohumil, Ungan Mehmet, Bayen Sabine, Windak Adam, Azeredo Joana, Stavrikj Katarina, Kreitmayer Sanda, Kostić Milena, Busneag Iliana-Carmen, Koskela Tuomas, Serafini Alice, Butterworth Joanne, Zwart Dorien Louise Maria, González-Lama Jesús, Vuletić Gorka, Van Poel Esther, Tušek Bunc Ksenija, Tuz Canan, Mevsim Vildan, Seifert Martin, Dahli Mina, Hrabač Pero, Hanževački Miroslav, Rakić Matić Jelena, Tomičić Marion, Rađa Marko, Heleno Bruno, Studzinski Krzysztof, Becze Ádám, Megallón-Botaya Rosa, Rogers Heather Lynn, Brütting Christine, Kafadar Didem, Lerma Irureta David, Fornacciari Davide, Nessler Katarzyna, Soleski Kiril, Méndez-López Fátima, Çöme Oğulcan, Ahmad Abeer, Petek Davorina
Department of Family Medicine, School of Medicine, University of Zagreb, Zagreb, Croatia.
Health Centre Zagreb-West, Zagreb, Croatia.
Eur J Gen Pract. 2025 Dec;31(1):2463630. doi: 10.1080/13814788.2025.2463630. Epub 2025 Feb 26.
Person-centred care (PCC) is a fundamental principle in general practice, emphasising practices tailored to individual patient preferences, needs, and values. Despite the importance of PCC, general practitioners (GPs) face obstacles in effectively implementing it, with associated factors remaining unclear.
The PACE GP/FP study aims to explore GPs' attitudes towards PCC and the factors facilitating or hindering its implementation in daily practice across European countries. This paper outlines the PACE GP/FP study protocol.
The cross-sectional design with data collection an online survey distribution to GPs in 24 European countries. Study instruments include two validated questionnaires (Perceived Stress Scale (PSS) and Patient Physician Orientation Scale (PPOS)) and additional items covering general information about the doctor and their practice, as well as facilitators and barriers to PCC. These additional items were specifically developed for the study, translated using the forward-backward method, evaluated through cognitive debriefing, and integrated into the REDCap platform to create language and country-specific survey links. The STROBE checklist guides the reporting of the manuscript.
The PACE GP/FP study will provide a comprehensive exploration of GPs' attitudes towards PCC and the factors shaping its practice in Europe. The findings from the PACE GP/FP study will provide evidence for designing future implementation strategies and guide targeted interventions to promote PCC in primary care across Europe.
以患者为中心的医疗服务(PCC)是全科医疗的一项基本原则,强调根据患者的个人偏好、需求和价值观量身定制医疗服务。尽管PCC很重要,但全科医生(GPs)在有效实施方面面临障碍,相关因素仍不明确。
PACE全科医生/家庭医生研究旨在探讨全科医生对PCC的态度以及在欧洲各国日常实践中促进或阻碍其实施的因素。本文概述了PACE全科医生/家庭医生研究方案。
采用横断面设计,通过在线调查向24个欧洲国家的全科医生收集数据。研究工具包括两份经过验证的问卷(感知压力量表(PSS)和医患导向量表(PPOS))以及涵盖医生及其执业的一般信息以及PCC的促进因素和障碍的其他项目。这些额外项目是专门为该研究开发的,采用前后翻译法进行翻译,通过认知反馈进行评估,并整合到REDCap平台中以创建特定语言和国家的调查链接。STROBE清单指导本文的报告。
PACE全科医生/家庭医生研究将全面探索全科医生对PCC的态度以及在欧洲影响其实践的因素。PACE全科医生/家庭医生研究的结果将为设计未来的实施策略提供证据,并指导有针对性的干预措施,以促进欧洲初级医疗保健中的PCC。