Eva S L Pedersen, Sarah Glick, Carmen C M De Jong, Cristina Ardura-Garcia, Anja Jochmann, Carmen Casaulta, Katharina Hartog, Diana Marangu-Boore, Dominik Mueller-Suter, Nicolas Regamey, Florian Singer, Alexander Moeller, Claudia E Kuehni
{"title":"Reporting of paediatric exercise-induced respiratory symptoms by physicians and parents: an observational prospective study.","authors":"Eva S L Pedersen, Sarah Glick, Carmen C M De Jong, Cristina Ardura-Garcia, Anja Jochmann, Carmen Casaulta, Katharina Hartog, Diana Marangu-Boore, Dominik Mueller-Suter, Nicolas Regamey, Florian Singer, Alexander Moeller, Claudia E Kuehni","doi":"10.57187/s.3939","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p><strong>Study aims: </strong>Routinely collected health data are increasingly used for research; however important anamnestic details may be missing from medical records. We compared physician documentation of paediatric exercise-induced respiratory symptoms in clinical notes with parental questionnaire responses for the same children.</p><p><strong>Methods: </strong>We analysed data from the Swiss Paediatric Airway Cohort (SPAC), a multicentre observational study of children treated in Swiss outpatient pulmonology clinics. We included children aged 6 to 17 years who were referred to a paediatric pulmonologist for evaluation of exercise-induced respiratory symptoms. Features of exercise-induced respiratory symptoms recorded by physicians were extracted from outpatient clinic letters transmitted to the referring physician, while parent-reported exercise-induced respiratory symptom data was collected from a standardised questionnaire completed at Swiss Paediatric Airway Cohort enrolment. We calculated agreement between physician-documented and parent-reported exercise-induced respiratory symptom characteristics using Cohen's and Fleiss's kappa.</p><p><strong>Results: </strong>Of 1669 children participating in the Swiss Paediatric Airway Cohort (2017-2019), 193 (12%) met the inclusion criteria, of whom 48% were girls. Physicians provided detailed information on exercise-induced respiratory symptoms in 186 (96%) outpatient clinic letters. Documented characteristics included: type of physical activity triggering exercise-induced respiratory symptoms (69%), location of exercise-induced respiratory symptoms in chest or throat (48%), respiratory phase of exercise-induced respiratory symptoms (45%) and timing of exercise-induced respiratory symptoms during or after exercise (37%). Previous bronchodilator use (94%) and its effect on exercise-induced respiratory symptoms (88%) were consistently documented by physicians. The clinic letters for children diagnosed with dysfunctional breathing more often contained detailed exercise-induced respiratory symptom characteristics than those diagnosed with asthma. The level of agreement between physician-documented and parent-reported exercise-induced respiratory symptoms was moderate for use of bronchodilators (κ = 0.53) and poor-to-fair for all other features (κ = 0.01-0.36).</p><p><strong>Conclusion: </strong>This study highlights that outpatient clinic letters may lack some details on exercise-induced respiratory symptom characteristics - information that parents could provide. A standardised and detailed method for documenting paediatric respiratory symptoms in the coordinated data infrastructure may enhance future analyses of routinely collected health data.</p>","PeriodicalId":22111,"journal":{"name":"Swiss medical weekly","volume":"155 ","pages":"3939"},"PeriodicalIF":2.1000,"publicationDate":"2025-04-02","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Swiss medical weekly","FirstCategoryId":"3","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.57187/s.3939","RegionNum":4,"RegionCategory":"医学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q2","JCRName":"MEDICINE, GENERAL & INTERNAL","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
Study aims: Routinely collected health data are increasingly used for research; however important anamnestic details may be missing from medical records. We compared physician documentation of paediatric exercise-induced respiratory symptoms in clinical notes with parental questionnaire responses for the same children.
Methods: We analysed data from the Swiss Paediatric Airway Cohort (SPAC), a multicentre observational study of children treated in Swiss outpatient pulmonology clinics. We included children aged 6 to 17 years who were referred to a paediatric pulmonologist for evaluation of exercise-induced respiratory symptoms. Features of exercise-induced respiratory symptoms recorded by physicians were extracted from outpatient clinic letters transmitted to the referring physician, while parent-reported exercise-induced respiratory symptom data was collected from a standardised questionnaire completed at Swiss Paediatric Airway Cohort enrolment. We calculated agreement between physician-documented and parent-reported exercise-induced respiratory symptom characteristics using Cohen's and Fleiss's kappa.
Results: Of 1669 children participating in the Swiss Paediatric Airway Cohort (2017-2019), 193 (12%) met the inclusion criteria, of whom 48% were girls. Physicians provided detailed information on exercise-induced respiratory symptoms in 186 (96%) outpatient clinic letters. Documented characteristics included: type of physical activity triggering exercise-induced respiratory symptoms (69%), location of exercise-induced respiratory symptoms in chest or throat (48%), respiratory phase of exercise-induced respiratory symptoms (45%) and timing of exercise-induced respiratory symptoms during or after exercise (37%). Previous bronchodilator use (94%) and its effect on exercise-induced respiratory symptoms (88%) were consistently documented by physicians. The clinic letters for children diagnosed with dysfunctional breathing more often contained detailed exercise-induced respiratory symptom characteristics than those diagnosed with asthma. The level of agreement between physician-documented and parent-reported exercise-induced respiratory symptoms was moderate for use of bronchodilators (κ = 0.53) and poor-to-fair for all other features (κ = 0.01-0.36).
Conclusion: This study highlights that outpatient clinic letters may lack some details on exercise-induced respiratory symptom characteristics - information that parents could provide. A standardised and detailed method for documenting paediatric respiratory symptoms in the coordinated data infrastructure may enhance future analyses of routinely collected health data.
期刊介绍:
The Swiss Medical Weekly accepts for consideration original and review articles from all fields of medicine. The quality of SMW publications is guaranteed by a consistent policy of rigorous single-blind peer review. All editorial decisions are made by research-active academics.