Clinical Practice Study
Copyright ©The Author(s) 2018.
World J Hepatol. Feb 27, 2018; 10(2): 319-328
Published online Feb 27, 2018. doi: 10.4254/wjh.v10.i2.319
Table 1 Information about the entire population invited to complete the survey (n = 163)
VariableTotalLevelnPercent
Completed survey163No7244.2
Yes9155.8
Gender163Female8049.1
Male8350.9
Primary practice location163Buffalo general medical center3320.3
Erie county medical center5634.4
Others7445.4
Role in primary care clinic163Resident in training13482.2
Supervising physician/attending2917.8
Level of training1143Resident PGY14833.6
Resident PGY24430.8
Resident PGY34028.0
Resident PGY4 and above117.7
Table 2 Baseline characteristics of those individuals who responded to the survey (n = 91) from among the entire population invited to complete the survey (n = 163)
VariableTotal1LevelCount/MeanPercent/SD
Gender91Male5055.0
Female4145.1
Specialty of practice91Family medicine99.9
Others8290.1
Primary practice location91Erie county medical center3639.6
Buffalo general medical center2931.9
Others2628.6
Evaluated at least one HCV patient in past 2 yr90Yes4752.2
No3134.4
Not Sure1213.3
Role in primary care clinic91Supervising physician/attending1516.5
Resident in training7683.5
Level of training85Resident PGY12529.4
Resident PGY23035.3
Resident PGY3 or above3035.3
Awareness of age-based rule for screening85Yes4957.6
No3642.4
Implementation of age-based rule for screening85Yes3440.0
No5160.0
Knowledge of HCV natural history85Scores from 0 to 1810.64.7
Knowledge of HCV treatment82Scores from 0 to 1911.02.9
Table 3 Regression analysis for Box-Cox transformed knowledge of hepatitis C virus natural history
VariableLevelEstimationSDP value
Intercept-24.901.390.001
Knowledge of HCV treatment5.930.100.001
GenderMaleReference level
Female0.040.540.94
Primary practice locationErie county medical centerReference level
Buffalo general medical center0.540.770.49
Others-0.580.610.35
At least one HCV patient in past 2 yrYesReference level
No/not Sure-0.540.650.41
Level of trainingResident PGY 1Reference level
Resident PGY 2-0.980.830.24
Resident PGY 3 and above0.060.780.94
Awareness of age-based rule for screeningYesReference level
No-0.920.650.17
Implementation of age-based rule for screeningYesReference level
No-0.070.650.91
Table 4 Regression analysis for Box-Cox transformed knowledge of hepatitis C virus treatment
VariableLevelEstimationSDP value
Intercept11.982.120.001
Knowledge of HCV natural historyscore < 6Reference level
6 ≤ score < 15-0.681.380.62
15 ≤ score-2.421.640.14
GenderMaleReference level
Female0.310.860.72
Primary practice locationErie county medical centerReference level
Buffalo general medical center0.271.200.82
Others-1.440.950.13
At least one HCV patient in past 2 yrYesReference level
No/not sure0.881.020.39
Level of trainingResident PGY 1Reference level
Resident PGY 21.511.300.25
Resident PGY 3 and above1.761.250.16
Awareness of age-based rule for screeningYesReference level
No-2.211.000.03
Implementation of age-based rule for screeningYesReference level
No1.011.010.32
Table 5 Regression analysis for implementation of birth cohort screening recommendations
VariableLevelEstimateSDP value
Intercept-4.482.190.04
Knowledge of HCV treatment-0.020.110.86
Knowledge of HCV natural history0.270.080.002
GenderMaleReference level
Female-0.940.680.17
Primary practice locationErie county medical centerReference level
Buffalo general medical center0.770.810.34
Others-0.360.720.62
At least one HCV patient in past 2 yrYesReference level
No/not sure2.430.900.001
Level of trainingResident PGY1Reference level
Resident PGY21.571.180.19
Resident PGY3 or above1.621.150.16
Awareness of age-based rule for screeningYesReference level
No-2.320.880.01
Table 6 Primary care physician screening practices for hepatitis C virus infection
QuestionTotalOptionCountPercent
In the past 2 yr, have you ordered a test with an intention to screen for HCV?85Yes7588.2
No or Not Sure1011.8
What is the strongest indication to screen for HCV?85Risk factor identified on patient encounter2630.6
Patients born between 1945-19651720.0
Abnormal liver enzymes4249.4
How have you screened for hepatitis C?85HCV antibody4755.3
Anti HCV antibody and HCV RNA PCR1112.9
Other combinations of Anti HCV antibody, HCV RNA, liver function tests, and "let the lab choose"2731.8
Do you follow professional society guidelines for HCV screening?85Yes6171.8
No2428.2
Table 7 Primary care physician practice patterns for hepatitis C virus screening
QuestionTotalOptionCountPercent
How often are HCV risk factors assessed during a clinic visit?85Always1416.5
Often3035.3
Sometimes2529.4
Rarely or never1618.8
Do you order an HCV screening test after identifying at least one risk factor?85Always2832.9
Often3035.3
Sometimes or rarely2731.8
Do you document HCV screening discussion/risk factor assessment in the health maintenance section of the patient’s chart?85Always or often2023.5
Sometimes2428.2
Rarely2934.1
Never1214.1
Table 8 Primary care physician perceptions toward screening for hepatitis C virus
QuestionTotalOptionCountPercent
Satisfied with the screening approach in the clinic85Yes2630.6
No2529.4
Not Sure3440.0
What is the most effective strategy in screening HCV in your clinic85Incorporate risk based screening1922.4
Incorporate birth cohort based screening1112.9
Incorporate both risk based and birth cohort screening5564.7
Most effect way to initiate screening during a clinic visit85Have patient fill out a screening questionnaire during wait period4755.3
Incorporate mandatory screening questions into EMR1922.4
Facilitate screening by use of posters in patient rooms910.6
Printed patient handout about screening1011.7
Table 9 Primary care physician identified barriers to screening for hepatitis C virus (n = 85)
OptionCountPercent
Inconsistency in offering HCV screening as a part of pre-set health maintenance protocol, time constraints in obtaining all HCV risk factors, unawareness of screening guidelines1416.5
Time constraints in obtaining all HCV risk factors1214.1
Unawareness of screening guidelines1214.1
Other combinations of inconsistency in offering HCV screening as a part of pre-set health maintenance protocol, time constraints in obtaining all HCV risk factors, taboo in asking confidential and personal information as outlined in the screening questionnaire, and unawareness of screening guidelines4755.3