Siemens survey highlights critical role of medical lab staff, influences on doctors' orders
A survey of 408 U.S. physicians, conducted by YouGov analysis institute and commissioned by Siemens Healthineers, reveals how significant laboratory testing is to doctors’ clinical decisions and how reliant they are upon the support laboratory professionals provide.
Doctors have a robust clinical toolkit to inform patient care decisions, which includes laboratory testing. To what extent physicians use and rely upon laboratory testing, however, has historically been unclear. The data affirms physicians overwhelmingly agree (99%) that clinical lab testing is an integral part of the healthcare system and that the testing lab professionals perform for their patients helps them do their jobs better. Further, every doctor surveyed (100%) agrees lab results help streamline how they use other healthcare resources, for example, more efficient use of imaging and biopsy.
Evidence-based clinical guidelines remain a primary influence in determining what tests doctors order for patients (98%). These guidelines support physicians with standardized steps for informing clinical decisions. The survey suggests physicians may be increasing their reliance upon test results. While test results are to be interpreted in conjunction with patients’ medical history, clinical presentation and other relevant findings, 98% of physicians agree they have modified a diagnosis or treatment plan based on lab test results and 98% also agree that lab results have helped justify their clinical course of action.
The survey also confirms systemic pressures are influencing their test order decisions. Inadequate healthcare coverage may prevent patients from getting the laboratory testing they need. While 67% of physicians say they do not have visibility into whether the tests they want to order are covered by their patient’s specific insurance, 60% of physicians with visibility into insurance or cost of tests (n=176) said cost of a lab test has led them to postpone tests they would have otherwise ordered.
While nearly one-third (32%) of physicians reported experiencing pressure to reduce their lab-test utilization, patient need and benefit are squarely top-of-mind to inform physicians’ care decisions, as 95% agree that ordering tests to validate a patient’s care plan is their priority over conserving resources.
Also influencing their testing decisions is the growing dynamic of “patient agency,” the ability to act on healthcare choices and influence outcomes. For example, patients may arrive with their own research and expectations for testing, sometimes pressuring doctors to order investigative testing that may contradict doctors’ expertise or clinical guidelines. Though clinical experience and evidence-based guidelines remain the foundation of their clinical decisions, the choices doctors make seem to also increasingly consider implications for patient satisfaction (i.e., evaluation of care relative to expectations). In fact, 84% of physicians have ordered lab testing to satisfy a patient’s request, and 76% agree that patient requests have led them to weigh patient satisfaction against clinical judgement. These requests can add cost, stress, and delays, for example. Further, false positives can lead to additional clinical evidence gathering or more investigative steps that may or may not be covered by insurance.
While 94% of physicians agree healthcare staffing shortages concern them, staffing shortages in the lab are felt more acutely. When labs are short-staffed, 96% agree it has a downstream effect on their patient care.
As test options for patients expand and the meaning of results for patients require more detailed interpretation, reliance on clinical laboratory professionals for guidance about how best to support their patients may be growing. While physicians indicate they feel supported by lab colleagues when they need guidance interpreting complex results (86%), more than half (55%) rely on the lab’s expertise to confirm which tests are clinically relevant for patients. Further supporting their interest in increasing collaboration, 96% are open to receiving feedback from labs to improve their test ordering practices.
The survey report, Decoding Doctors’ Decisions: How System Friction and Patient Agency Affect Physicians—And What This Means for Lab Testing is available here.