在初级保健中开发针对儿童抗生素的数据支持干预措施:一项定性研究。

IF 2.5 Q2 PRIMARY HEALTH CARE
BJGP Open Pub Date : 2024-09-16 DOI:10.3399/BJGPO.2024.0032
Oliver van Hecke, Aleksandra Borek, Christopher Butler, Sarah Tonkin-Crine
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:学龄前儿童(5 岁以下)是全科医生开抗生素处方率最高的人群,主要用于治疗自限性急性呼吸道感染(RTI)。对超过 25 万名英国儿童进行的研究表明,儿童的急性呼吸道感染抗生素使用史可能会很好地预测儿童是否会因同一疾病发作而再次咨询医疗专业人员,并增加临床工作量:与学龄前儿童的家长/监护人和初级保健临床医生共同开展的两阶段定性研究 方法:在第一阶段,通过与 8 名家长/监护人的初步焦点小组讨论和与 11 名临床医生的 "大声思考 "访谈,我们共同设计了干预措施(计算机屏幕提示和个性化咨询宣传单)。在第二阶段,13 名临床医生使用了整合到全科医生电脑软件中的干预措施,并通过 "畅想 "访谈分享了他们的反馈意见。我们对访谈进行了录音、转录和专题分析:我们共同创建了一种数据驱动型干预措施,可将儿童急性 RTI 抗生素使用史和个性化宣传单自动整合到电子病历中。我们发现,家长和临床医生都认为这种干预措施原则上是可以接受的,而且在初级保健咨询中使用也是可行的:结论:将这种干预措施纳入实践工作流程,可以有效地扩大规模,促进有效的抗菌药物管理,减少初级保健中不必要的抗生素使用。进一步的研究将在未来的试验中测试这种干预措施。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Developing a data-enabled nudge intervention for childhood antibiotics in primary care: a qualitative study.

Background: Preschool children (aged≤5 years old) have the highest antibiotic prescribing rate in general practice, mostly for self-limiting acute respiratory tract infections (RTIs). Research from over 250 000 UK children suggests that a child's antibiotic history for RTI may be a good predictor for re-consulting a health professional for the same illness episode and increase clinical workload.

Aim: To develop a data-enabled nudge intervention to optimise antibiotic prescribing for acute RTI based on a child's antibiotic history in general practice DESIGN & SETTING: Two phase qualitative study with parents/carers of preschool children and primary care clinicians METHOD: In phase 1, through an initial focus group with eight parents/carers and 'think aloud' interviews with 11 clinicians, we co-designed the intervention (computer screen prompt and personalised consultation leaflet). In phase 2, 13 clinicians used the intervention, integrated into the GP computer software, and share their feedback through 'think aloud' interviews. Interviews were audio-recorded, transcribed, and analysed thematically.

Results: We co-created a data-driven intervention that automatically integrates a child's antibiotic history for acute RTI and personalised leaflet into the electronic medical records. We found that parents and clinicians found this intervention, in principle, acceptable and feasible to use in primary care consultations.

Conclusion: Delivering such interventions, integrated into practice workflow, could be efficiently scaled up to promote effective antimicrobial stewardship and reduce unnecessary antibiotic use in primary care. Further research will test this intervention in a future trial.

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来源期刊
BJGP Open
BJGP Open Medicine-Family Practice
CiteScore
5.00
自引率
0.00%
发文量
181
审稿时长
22 weeks
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