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The Role of the Neurological Examination in Primary Care Referrals to Neurology

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 November 2022

Sandra Reiter-Campeau*
Affiliation:
Department of Neurology and Neurosurgery, McGill University, Montréal, Canada
Fraser Moore
Affiliation:
Department of Neurology and Neurosurgery, McGill University, Montréal, Canada
*
Corresponding author: Sandra Reiter-Campeau, Ludmer Research & Training Building, 1033 Pine Avenue West – Room 310, Montréal, QC H3A 1A1, Canada. Email: sandra.reiter-campeau@mail.mcgill.ca
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Abstract:

Low confidence with the neurological examination may contribute to primary care physicians’ discomfort with neurology and a low threshold to refer patients. We surveyed primary care physicians in Quebec about their last three referrals to neurology to evaluate what role the neurological examination played in their decision. Twenty-six physicians answered concerning 73 patient referrals. We found that primary care physicians use the neurological examination to reinforce their decision but rarely depend on the findings. Our results suggest that improving history-taking rather than examination skills may have more impact on neurology referrals, influencing quality of referral information above quantity of referrals.

Résumé :

RÉSUMÉ :

Le rôle de l’examen neurologique dans l’orientation de patients vers un neurologue par des médecins de première ligne.

Une faible confiance à l’égard des examens neurologiques peut contribuer au « malaise » des médecins de première ligne à l’égard de la neurologie ainsi qu’à un faible taux d’orientation de leurs patients vers un neurologue. À ce sujet, nous avons interrogé des médecins de première ligne du Québec en ce qui regarde leurs trois dernières orientations en neurologie afin d’évaluer le rôle joué par l’examen neurologique dans leur décision. Au total, 26 médecins ont répondu, ce qui a représenté 73 patients orientés. Nous avons ainsi constaté que les médecins de première ligne utilisent certes l’examen neurologique pour renforcer leur décision mais qu’ils se fient rarement à ses résultats. Nos résultats suggèrent donc que l’amélioration des compétences en matière de vérification des antécédents médicaux (history-taking) et non le fait de réaliser un examen neurologique pourrait avoir plus d’impact sur l’orientation vers un neurologue en influençant la qualité de l’information liée à ces orientations plutôt que la quantité des patients aiguillés.

Type
Brief Communication
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BYCreative Common License - NCCreative Common License - ND
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/), which permits non-commercial re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided that no alterations are made and the original article is properly cited. The written permission of Cambridge University Press must be obtained prior to any commercial use and/or adaptation of the article.
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2022. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of Canadian Neurological Sciences Federation

Considering the long delays to access outpatient neurological care across Canada (e.g., see Liddy et al. Reference Liddy, Moroz and Affleck1 ), one strategy to ease wait times would be to reduce the number of referrals from primary care to neurology. Although accounting for 10–15% of problems encountered in their practice, Neurology is one area of medicine with which primary care physicians often report being less comfortable. Reference McCarron, Stevenson, Loftus and McKeown2Reference Loftus, Wade and McCarron3 This can lead to the referral of patients not for a specific diagnosis or treatment but rather for symptoms. Reference Bradi, Sitwell, Liddy, Afkham and Keely4 Although over-referral may not be an issue, Reference Mehrotra, Forrest and Lin5 more precise clinical impressions and referral information could improve triaging and reduce wait times for patients who need to be prioritized for neurological assessment.

We were interested in exploring how primary care physicians use the neurological examination when assessing patients with neurological symptoms, since some evidence suggests that low confidence with performing and interpreting this examination contributes to their reported discomfort with neurology. Reference Murray6 The aim of our study was to examine what role the neurological examination plays in primary care physicians’ decision to refer. We conducted a cross-sectional survey of board-certified primary care physicians affiliated with McGill University or University of Montreal. We asked participants about the last three patients they referred to neurology and the role the neurological examination played in the decision to refer (survey available in Supplemental materials).

Twenty-six family physicians answered the survey (demographic information available in Supplemental materials). In the 90 days prior to completing the survey, the majority of participants (19/26 [73%]) had referred 1 or 2 patients to neurology, 4 (15%) had referred 3–5 patients and 3 (12%) had not referred any within those 90 days (the rest of the survey asked about the last 3 patients referred, regardless of the timing). Only 4 participants, who together accounted for 12 patient referrals, had received formal post-graduate training in Neurology (a neurology rotation or direct training with a neurologist).

Participants reported on a total of 73 referrals. In 31 (43%) of these encounters, the primary care physician performed a full neurological examination, in 37 (50%) they performed a partial examination, and in 5 (7%) a neurological examination was not done or was done by a trainee. Twenty-eight of the 73 referrals (38%) had an abnormal exam. The survey asked whether the results of the neurological examination influenced the primary care physician’s decision to refer the patient. The exam findings (positive or negative) did influence the decision to refer the patient in 38% (28/73) of patients; however, the findings changed the family physician’s mind to refer the patient in only 5% (4/73). Concerning the single main reason for the referral, the presenting symptom was the most commonly reported reason in 42% (31/73) of cases; abnormal findings on the neurological examination were the main reason for referral in 30% (22/73).

Among the four participants who had previously received formal training in Neurology, there was a tendency to more often detect abnormal findings on examination (7/12 [58%] versus 21/56 [38%]) and to more often report that the examination influenced their decision to refer (7/12 [58%] versus 21/61 [34%]).

Twenty-seven referrals (37%) provided the presenting symptoms for which the diagnosis was unclear, 25 referrals (34%) provided a specific diagnosis, 19 (26%) provided neurological examination findings, and 18 (25%) provided a few differential diagnoses. The detection of abnormal findings influenced the information provided on the referral. Forty-six percent (13/28) of patients with an abnormal neurological examination were referred with a specific diagnosis versus 25% (10/40) of patients with a normal examination; 50% (14/28) of patients with abnormal examinations were referred with examination finding information on the referral versus 12.5% (5/40) of patients with normal examinations.

Six physicians provided (optional) comments regarding the neurological examination and its role in their practice. Two mentioned rarely detecting abnormalities, and one specifying that this made them doubt the accuracy of their exams. One stated that the neurological examination was almost never the reason they refer, as compared to the history and imaging findings. A fourth said the examination was hard to master but as important as other parts of the physical exam. A fifth said they used the examination more as a tool to follow patients. Finally, a sixth brought up time constraints as a potential limitation to the use of the neurological examination in their practice.

Overall, the survey results demonstrated that although the neurological examination supported the decision of primary care physicians to refer patients for specialized neurological care in an important minority of cases, the examination findings only rarely changed the physicians’ decision of whether to refer. The most commonly indicated reason for referral was the presenting symptom, without a particular suspected diagnosis or examination finding. This is consistent with our experience and with previous reports. Reference Bradi, Sitwell, Liddy, Afkham and Keely4,Reference Williams, O'Riordan, McGuigan, Hutchinson and Tubridy7 For instance, in a study from Ireland in which primary care physicians were asked to specify the suspected etiology in their referrals to neurology, a third of physicians left the etiology section blank. Reference Williams, O'Riordan, McGuigan, Hutchinson and Tubridy7

What other factors might influence the decision to refer? Although respondents to our survey highlighted patient requests as being the main reason in only 11% of patients, patient preference and personal concern regarding symptoms are significant drivers of referrals from primary care. Reference Mehrotra, Forrest and Lin5,Reference Ridsdale, Clark and Dowson8 In one study comparing headache patients referred to neurologists to those who were not referred, the main differences were a higher number of visits to their primary care doctor and a higher level of anxiety related to the headaches; headache severity was not different between the two groups. Reference Ridsdale, Clark and Dowson8 There are numerous other physician-related and patient-related reasons that impact decisions to refer such as the care provider’s experience, availability of prompt appointments, and geographical factors. Reference Mehrotra, Forrest and Lin5,Reference Kobau, Zack, Sapkota, Sajatovic and Kiriakopoulos9

Among the comments received in our survey, low frequency of detecting abnormalities, challenge mastering the exam, low trust in one’s examination skills, and time constraints were raised as factors limiting the use of the neurological examination in primary care. One might hypothesize that additional training in Neurology could result in the neurological examination having a greater impact on the decision to refer. Our results suggest this might be the case; although only 4 of 26 participants had received such training, they reported more often that the examination influenced their decision to refer. In a previous study of neurophobia among general practice trainees, suggestions for improving neurology education included referral guidelines and instruction on performing a “quick and better neurological examination”. Reference McCarron, Stevenson, Loftus and McKeown2 In another survey of 25 family physicians regarding comfort with neurology, 11 reported difficulty performing the neurological examination and 21 had difficulty interpreting the findings they did detect Reference Murray6 ; the physicians in this study were offered a list of short courses, the course on the neurological examination was most requested and subsequently most attended.

Even if the neurological examination is not the most important factor in the decision to refer, the presence of abnormal findings did influence the content of the referral in approximately one quarter of cases. Previous work found about 50% of referrals from primary care to neurology include examination information. Reference Williams, O'Riordan, McGuigan, Hutchinson and Tubridy7,Reference Bekkelund and Albretsen10 This may be of benefit in triaging consultation requests and thus impact patient care. However, with the increased use of telemedicine as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic, the neurological exam may now have a less important role in referral.

Our survey does have weaknesses. The retrospective design may have introduced recall bias, since participants were asked to recall past encounters, some of which had occurred over 90 days prior. Participants were asked to self-report details such as what they wrote on referrals, and we did not attempt to independently confirm this information. Most respondents practiced in a single city and all had university affiliations, which might reduce the generalizability of the findings. Additionally, the small sample size may have impacted the validity of our findings. Finally, our survey did not ask the primary care physicians about patients that were not referred to neurology due to a normal neurological examination; therefore, although we found that the findings changed the decision in only 5% of patients ultimately referred to neurology, this might represent an underestimation of the examination’s influence on the decision to refer if it does not include patients for whom a normal exam was sufficiently reassuring to avoid referral.

Despite these limitations, the results of our survey are important. They reveal that primary care physicians use the neurological examination to reinforce their decision to refer but often do not depend on the findings. Future studies should consider other factors influencing the decisions to refer, not only the neurological examination. Our results suggest that interventions to improve neurological training of primary care physicians may have a greater impact if they target effective history-taking and the development of a symptom-based diagnostic approach rather than examination skills. Even if this does not change the absolute number of referrals, it may positively influence the quality of referral information provided.

The survey was approved by the Research Ethics Board of the Jewish General Hospital.

Supplementary Material

To view supplementary material for this article, please visit https://doi.org/10.1017/cjn.2022.312.

Conflict of Interest

The authors have no conflicts of interest to declare.

Statement of Authorship

SRC and FM contributed equally to the survey conception, data collection, data interpretation, and drafting of the manuscript.

References

Liddy, C, Moroz, I, Affleck, E, et al. How long are Canadians waiting to access specialty care?: Retrospective study from a primary care perspective. Can Fam Physician. 2020;66:434–44.Google ScholarPubMed
McCarron, MO, Stevenson, M, Loftus, AM, McKeown, P. Neurophobia among general practice trainees: the evidence, perceived causes and solutions. Clin Neurol Neurosurg. 2014;122:124–8. DOI 10.1016/j.clineuro.2014.03.021.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Loftus, AM, Wade, C, McCarron, MO. Primary care perceptions of neurology and neurology services. Postgrad Med J. 2016;92:318–21. DOI 10.1136/postgradmedj-2015-133683.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Bradi, AC, Sitwell, L, Liddy, C, Afkham, A, Keely, E. Ask a neurologist: what primary care providers ask, and reducing referrals through eConsults. Neurol Clin Pract. 2018;8:186–91. DOI 10.1212/CPJ.0000000000000458.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mehrotra, A, Forrest, CB, Lin, CY. Dropping the baton: specialty referrals in the United States. Milbank Q. 2011;89:3968. DOI 10.1111/j.1468-0009.2011.00619.x.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
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Williams, LO, O'Riordan, S, McGuigan, C, Hutchinson, M, Tubridy, N. A web-based electronic neurology referral system: a solution for an overburdened healthcare system? Ir Med J. 2012;105:301–3.Google ScholarPubMed
Ridsdale, L, Clark, LV, Dowson, AJ, et al. How do patients referred to neurologists for headache differ from those managed in primary care? Br J Gen Pract. 2007;57:388–95.Google ScholarPubMed
Kobau, R, Zack, MM, Sapkota, S, Sajatovic, M, Kiriakopoulos, E. When and why US primary care providers do and do not refer their patients with new-onset seizures or existing epilepsy or seizure disorders to neurologists. Epilepsy Behav. 2021;125:108385. DOI 10.1016/j.yebeh.2021.108385.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Bekkelund, SI, Albretsen, C. Evaluation of referrals from general practice to a neurological department. Fam Pract. 2002;19:297–9. DOI 10.1093/fampra/19.3.297.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
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