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Public perceptions on pathology: a fundamental change is required

Gábor Fischer, Leslie Ann Anderson, Marc Andres Ranson, David Sellen, Eric McArthur

2020Journal of Clinical Pathology17 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Pathology has been mostly invisible for the public. The missing recognition affects the pathologists' reputation, and efforts with recruitment and advocacy. Our survey with 387 respondents confirms that the public knowledge on the role of the pathologists has not improved despite campaigns and advocacy efforts. Pathology was identified as a medical specialty by 79.1% of the respondents. Only 34.8% assumed that it takes more than 8 years of post-high school training to become a pathologist. Most commonly, another medical specialist was identified as the ultimate diagnostician on Pap tests (gynaecologist), breast biopsies or malignant surgical excisions (oncologist), gastrointestinal biopsies (gastroenterologist) or prostate biopsies (urologist). The experience gained by undergoing these procedures had minimal impact on understanding the pathologists' role, since they were identified as ultimate diagnosis makers by the minority of these patients (13.8%-36.4%). The integration of pathologist-interactions into patient care may be a potential solution with benefits beyond improved perceptions.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineSpecialtyAnatomical pathologySurgical pathologyPathologyFamily medicineGeneral surgeryImmunohistochemistryPatient-Provider Communication in HealthcareSocial Media in Health EducationRadiology practices and education
Public perceptions on pathology: a fundamental change is required | Litcius