Impact of physician assistants on quality of care: rapid review.

IF 105.7 1区 医学 Q1 Medicine
Nicola Cooper, Steven Agius, Kate Freeman, Helen Church, Farah Yoosoof, Anna Frain, John Frain, Rebecca McConnell, Emma Wilson, Jo Leonardi-Bee
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Objective: To determine the impact of physician assistants, compared with physicians, on quality of care in the context of an ongoing UK policy review.

Design: Rapid systematic review.

Search strategy: Keyword search of three databases; search and citation tracking of previous systematic reviews.

Eligibility criteria: Empirical studies that quantitatively compared care delivered by physician assistants with care delivered by physicians, including residents, in economically developed countries, published between January 2005 and January 2025.

Main outcomes of interest: Measures of outcomes of care, as defined by the Institute of Medicine's definition of quality: safety, effectiveness, patient centredness, timeliness, efficiency, and equity.

Methods: Eligible studies were categorised as primary care, secondary care, physician assistants versus residents in hospitals, diagnosis/performance, and cost effectiveness. Two reviewers independently extracted data on study design, samples, methods, and findings. Each study was assessed using a risk of bias tool. Owing to the heterogeneity of included studies, a narrative synthesis of the main findings was conducted. An assessment of confidence in the body of evidence for each outcome was based on the number and quality of relevant studies and the consistency of results between similar studies.

Results: Of 3636 studies screened, 167 studies were eligible and 40 met the inclusion criteria. These consisted mainly of retrospective observational studies of weak quality. Most (31/40) were from the US, and no data from a post-covid-19 context were found. The greatest number of studies with the most consistent results were those that found that physician assistants practised safely and effectively when working under direct supervision and in post-diagnostic care. No difference was found in patient satisfaction between physician assistants and physicians. Although adding physician assistants to medical teams increases access to care, this may reflect the benefits of increased staffing rather than the unique contribution of the physician assistant role. Evidence on cost effectiveness is limited. Patients in the UK are more likely to see a physician assistant if they live in a socioeconomically deprived area.

Conclusion: The evidence found in this review is limited and does not support the safety or effectiveness of indirect supervision of physician assistants in undifferentiated (pre-diagnosis) settings. National guidance on the supervision and scope of practice for physician assistants can ensure that physician assistants practise safely and effectively.

Study registration: PROSPERO CRD42024614992.

医师助理对护理质量的影响:快速回顾。
目的:在正在进行的英国政策审查的背景下,确定医师助理与医师相比对护理质量的影响。设计:快速系统回顾。搜索策略:三个数据库的关键词搜索;以前系统综述的搜索和引用跟踪。资格标准:2005年1月至2025年1月发表的经济发达国家医师助理提供的护理与医生(包括住院医师)提供的护理进行定量比较的实证研究。关注的主要结果:根据医学研究所对质量的定义,衡量护理结果的指标:安全性、有效性、以患者为中心、及时性、效率和公平性。方法:符合条件的研究分为初级保健、二级保健、医师助理与住院医师、诊断/表现和成本效益。两位审稿人独立提取研究设计、样本、方法和结果的数据。使用偏倚风险工具对每项研究进行评估。由于纳入研究的异质性,对主要研究结果进行了叙述性综合。对每个结果的证据体的可信度评估是基于相关研究的数量和质量以及类似研究之间结果的一致性。结果:在筛选的3636项研究中,167项研究符合纳入标准,40项符合纳入标准。这些研究主要包括质量较差的回顾性观察性研究。大多数(31/40)来自美国,没有发现来自后covid-19背景的数据。与最一致的结果最多的研究是那些发现医师助理在直接监督下工作和诊断后护理时安全有效的研究。医师助理与医师在患者满意度上无差异。虽然在医疗队中增加医生助理可以增加获得护理的机会,但这可能反映的是人员增加带来的好处,而不是医生助理角色的独特贡献。关于成本效益的证据有限。在英国,如果患者生活在社会经济贫困的地区,他们更有可能去看医生助理。结论:本综述中发现的证据有限,不支持在未鉴别(诊断前)情况下对医师助理进行间接监督的安全性或有效性。关于医师助理的监督和执业范围的国家指导可以确保医师助理安全有效地执业。研究注册:PROSPERO CRD42024614992。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
BMJ : British Medical Journal
BMJ : British Medical Journal Medicine-General Medicine
CiteScore
19.90
自引率
1.80%
发文量
2997
审稿时长
2-4 weeks
期刊介绍: The BMJ (British Medical Journal) is an international peer-reviewed medical journal with a "continuous publication" model, where articles are published on bmj.com before appearing in the print journal. The website is updated daily with the latest original research, education, news, and comment articles, along with podcasts, videos, and blogs. The BMJ's editorial team is primarily located in London, with additional editors in Europe, the US, and India.
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