英国初级保健移民患者多重感染筛查:挑战与机遇?

IF 3.9 Q1 PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH
Jessica Carter , Felicity Knights , Anna Deal , Alison F Crawshaw , Sally E Hayward , Rebecca Hall , Philippa Matthews , Farah Seedat , Yusuf Ciftci , Dominik Zenner , Fatima Wurie , Ines Campos-Matos , Azeem Majeed , Ana Requena-Mendez , Sally Hargreaves
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引用次数: 0

摘要

欧洲的移民面临着不成比例的未确诊感染负担,包括结核病、血源性病毒和寄生虫感染,许多人属于免疫接种不足的群体。欧洲疾病控制中心(ECDC)呼吁采取创新战略,在初级保健中为移民提供综合的多种疾病筛查,但这在英国实施得很差。我们进行了深入的定性研究,以了解初级保健中传染病筛查的当前做法、障碍和解决方案,并就合作开发的数字化综合临床决策工具“Health Catch UP!”寻求反馈。,支持对流动病人进行多重感染筛查。对英国初级保健专业人员进行了两阶段定性研究,进行了深入的半结构化电话访谈。在A阶段,我们对临床工作人员(全科医生(gp)、护士、保健助理(hca))进行了访谈;为B阶段(行政人员)收集和分析这些数据。使用主题分析对数据进行迭代分析。在A阶段,在b阶段招募了48名临床医生(25名全科医生、15名护士、7名hca、1名药剂师)和16名行政人员(11名执业经理、5名接待员)。受访者对初级保健有效提供传染病筛查的能力持积极态度。然而,我们发现目前的传染病筛查缺乏标准化的方法,许多做法没有筛查系统,这意味着移民患者并不总是接受循证护理(即NICE/ECDC/UKHSA筛查指南)。报告了患者、工作人员和系统层面的筛查障碍。答复者报告说,现有筛查举措(如区域潜伏性结核病筛查)实施不力,原因是途径过于复杂,需要大量的行政/临床时间,缺乏财政/专家支持。解决方案包括患者/工作人员传染病冠军、有针对性的培训和专家支持、简化筛查和管理积极结果的护理途径以及财政激励。参加者积极回应“健康赶上!”报告指出,它将系统地整合数据并支持临床决策,增加知识,减少错过的筛查机会,并使移徙者基于初级保健的传染病筛查正常化。在英国初级保健中,对移民人口进行传染病筛查的工作并不全面。创新的数字工具,如健康赶超!可以显著改善疾病检测和有效实施筛查指南,但需要强有力的测试和资源。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Multi-infection screening for migrant patients in UK primary care: Challenges and opportunities

Background

Migrants in Europe face a disproportionate burden of undiagnosed infection, including tuberculosis, blood-borne viruses, and parasitic infections and many belong to an under-immunised group. The European Centre for Disease Control (ECDC) has called for innovative strategies to deliver integrated multi-disease screening to migrants within primary care, yet this is poorly implemented in the UK. We did an in-depth qualitative study to understand current practice, barriers and solutions to infectious disease screening in primary care, and to seek feedback on a collaboratively developed digitalised integrated clinical decision-making tool called Health Catch UP!, which supports multi-infection screening for migrant patients.

Methods

Two-phase qualitative study of UK primary healthcare professionals, in-depth semi-structured telephone-interviews were conducted. In Phase A, we conducted interviews with clinical staff (general practitioners (GPs), nurses, health-care-assistants (HCAs)); these informed data collection and analysis for phase B (administrative staff). Data were analysed iteratively, using thematic analysis.

Results

In phase A, 48 clinicians were recruited (25 GPs, 15 nurses, seven HCAs, one pharmacist) and 16 administrative staff (11 Practice-Managers, five receptionists) in phase B. Respondents were positive about primary care's ability to effectively deliver infectious disease screening. However, we found current infectious disease screening lacks a standardised approach and many practices have no system for screening meaning migrant patients are not always receiving evidence-based care (i.e., NICE/ECDC/UKHSA screening guidelines). Barriers to screening were reported at patient, staff, and system-levels. Respondents reported poor implementation of existing screening initiatives (e.g., regional latent TB screening) citing overly complex pathways that required extensive administrative/clinical time and lacked financial/expert support. Solutions included patient/staff infectious disease champions, targeted training and specialist support, simplified care pathways for screening and management of positive results, and financial incentivisation. Participants responded positively to Health Catch-UP!, stating it would systematically integrate data and support clinical decision-making, increase knowledge, reduce missed screening opportunities, and normalisation of primary care-based infectious disease screening for migrants.

Conclusions

Our results suggest that implementation of infectious disease screening in migrant populations is not comprehensively done in UK primary care. Primary health care professionals support the concept of innovative digital tools like Health Catch-UP! and that they could significantly improve disease detection and effective implementation of screening guidance but that they require robust testing and resourcing.

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来源期刊
Journal of Migration and Health
Journal of Migration and Health Social Sciences-Sociology and Political Science
CiteScore
5.70
自引率
8.70%
发文量
65
审稿时长
153 days
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