RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 Qualitative study on shared decision making in cystitis management in general practice JF BJGP Open JO BJGP Open FD Royal College of General Practitioners SP BJGPO.2023.0179 DO 10.3399/BJGPO.2023.0179 A1 van Horrik, Tessa MZXK A1 Colliers, Annelies A1 Blanker, Marco H A1 de Bont, Eefje GPM A1 van Driel, Antoinette A A1 Laan, Bart J A1 Geerlings, Suzanne E A1 Venekamp, Roderick P A1 Anthierens, Sibyl A1 Platteel, Tamara N YR 2024 UL http://bjgpopen.org/content/early/2024/07/23/BJGPO.2023.0179.abstract AB Background Cystitis is commonly treated with antibiotics, although non-antibiotic options could be considered for healthy non-pregnant women. Shared decision making (SDM) can be used in cystitis management to discuss the various treatment options but is not frequently applied in general practice.Aim To identify barriers and facilitators for applying SDM in cystitis management in general practice.Design & setting Qualitative explorative research in general practice with healthcare professionals (HCPs; GPs and GP assistants) and healthy non-pregnant women with a recent history of cystitis (patients).Method Individual semi-structured interviews were conducted between May and October 2022. We applied a combination of thematic and framework analysis.Results Ten GPs, seven GP assistants, and 15 patients were interviewed. We identified the following three main barriers and one key facilitator: (1) applying SDM is deemed inefficient; (2) HCPs assume that patients expect antibiotic treatment and some HCPs consider non-antibiotic treatment inferior; (3) patients are largely unaware of the various non-antibiotic treatment options for cystitis; and (4) HCPs recognise some benefits of applying SDM in cystitis management, including reduced antibiotic use and improved patient empowerment, and patients appreciate involvement in treatment decisions, but preferences for SDM vary.Conclusion SDM is infrequently applied in cystitis treatment in general practice owing to the current focus on efficient cystitis management that omits patient contact, HCPs’ perceptions, and patient unawareness. Nevertheless, both HCPs and patients recognise the long-term benefits of applying SDM in cystitis management. Our findings facilitate the development of tailored interventions to increase the application of SDM, which should be co-created with HCPs and patients, and fit into the current efficient cystitis management.