评估印第安纳州医疗保健专业人员的蜱和蜱传疾病的知识。

Phurchhoki Sherpa, Jasleen Kaur, Maria V Murgia, Clifford Sadof, Linda Pfeiffer, Catherine A Hill
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摘要

在印第安纳州和北美,蜱虫和蜱传疾病(TBD)的风险正在增加。成功地预防、诊断和治疗ttd需要医疗保健专业人员充分了解情况并做好准备。本研究报告了2020年对465名印第安纳州医疗保健专业人员进行的在线调查的结果,该调查旨在评估他们对蜱虫和tbd的知识,并确定影响总知识得分的因素。该调查包括24个离散/顺序问题和一个开放式问题。在印第安纳州进行了统计分析,包括方差分析、t检验和Boruta算法。印第安纳州医疗保健专业人员在蜱虫和疾病相关问题上的得分分别为30.8%和57.9%。专业人员在大多数与疾病相关的问题上得分更高,包括(i)及时清除蜱虫以降低TBD传播风险的重要性,(ii)并非所有莱姆病病例都出现牛眼疹,以及(iii) TBD的体征和症状。他们在与蜱虫相关的问题上得分较低,包括(i)能够向人类传播疾病的蜱虫种类,(ii)被认为是地方性的ttd, (iii)肩胛骨蜱(鹿蜱)的分布,以及(iv)被认为是印第安纳州莱姆病传播风险较高的地区。知识得分因人口统计类别而异,在线资源的使用被认为是总知识得分最重要的预测因素。这些发现强调了提高对现有资源的认识、扩大在线教育材料以涵盖莱姆病以外的tbd以及促进自主学习的重要性。实现这些目标需要州和公共卫生机构、医疗保健专业人员、研究机构和社区外展伙伴之间的合作。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Evaluating knowledge of ticks and tick-borne diseases among Indiana healthcare professionals.

Ticks and tick-borne disease (TBD) risks are increasing in Indiana and North America. The successful prevention, diagnosis, and treatment of TBDs requires healthcare professionals be well-informed and prepared. This study reports the findings of a 2020 online survey of 465 Indiana healthcare professionals, designed to assess their knowledge of ticks and TBDs and identify factors influencing total knowledge scores. The survey included 24 discrete/ordinal questions and one open-ended question. Statistical analyses, including ANOVA, t-tests, and the Boruta algorithm, were conducted in R. Indiana healthcare professionals scored 30.8% for tick- and 57.9% for disease-related questions. Professionals scored higher on most disease-related questions, including (i) the importance of prompt tick removal to reduce TBD transmission risk, (ii) that not all Lyme disease cases present with bull's-eye rash, and (iii) the signs and symptoms of TBDs. They scored lower on tick-related questions, including (i) the tick species capable of transmitting diseases to humans, (ii) TBDs considered endemic, (iii) the distribution of Ixodes scapularis (deer tick), and (iv) regions considered higher risk for Lyme disease transmission in Indiana. Knowledge scores varied across demographic categories, with the use of online resources identified as the most important predictor of total knowledge scores. These findings highlight the importance of increasing awareness of existing resources, expanding online educational materials to cover TBDs beyond Lyme disease, and promoting self-guided learning. Achieving these goals will require collaboration among state and public health agencies, healthcare professionals, research institutions, and community outreach partners.

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