设计一种改善幽门螺杆菌感染管理的干预措施

Sumit R. Majumdar MD MPH, Stephen B. Soumerai ScD (Professor), Marianne Lee PharmD (Clinical Pharmacist), Dennis Ross-Degnan ScD (Associate Professor)
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引用次数: 8

摘要

背景:哈佛朝圣者医疗保健(HPHC)是一个混合模式的非盈利健康维护组织,为改善接受慢性抑酸(AS)治疗的患者幽门螺杆菌(HP)的检测和治疗,开发了一种干预措施。方法于1999年对10名全职初级保健医生(4名工作人员模式医生和6名团体执业医生)进行访谈,了解他们对消化不良、慢性AS药物使用、HP感染方法的知识、态度和做法,以及各种可能用于质量改进计划的潜在干预措施的可行性和可接受性。结果关于消化不良和HP感染的自我报告实践相对统一,医生普遍了解当前的建议。三种常见的误解成为最佳HP管理的障碍:未经治疗的HP不被认为是一个重要问题;使用药物治疗慢性AS的患者很少有HP感染;长期使用AS药物被认为是有效的,没有不良后果。所有的医生都想要简短的教育材料和明确的指导方针,最好是在当地改编并得到当地专家的认可。所有的举报人都同意,QI干预成功的主要障碍是需要额外的时间和精力,特别是针对没有症状性抱怨的患者群体。访谈揭示了在改善HP感染管理、针对教育信息和定制不同方法以促进不同管理医疗环境中的实践变化方面存在许多障碍。干预方案的循证组成部分包括医生教育、通知/提醒系统和基于实践的工具,以促进改变和减少工作量。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Designing an Intervention to Improve the Management of Helicobacter pylori Infection

Background

An intervention to improve the testing and treatment of Helicobacter pylori (HP) in patients receiving chronic acid suppression (AS) therapy was developed at Harvard Pilgrim Health Care (HPHC), a mixed-model not-for-profit health maintenance organization.

Methods

Ten full-time primary care physicians (4 staff model and 6 group practice) were interviewed in 1999 about their knowledge, attitudes, and practice regarding dyspepsia, the use of chronic AS drugs, and approaches to HP infection, as well as about the feasibility and acceptability of various potential interventions that might be used in a quality improvement program.

Results

Self-reported practice regarding dyspepsia and HP infection were relatively uniform, and physicians were generally aware of current recommendations. Three common misperceptions acted as barriers to optimal HP management: Untreated HP was not considered an important problem; patients who used drugs for chronic AS rarely had HP infection; and chronic use of AS drugs was considered effective and without adverse consequence. All physicians wanted brief educational materials with explicit guidelines, preferably locally adapted and endorsed by local experts. All informants agreed that the main barrier to successful QI interventions was the requirement for any extra time or effort, particularly when directed at populations of patients who do not have symptomatic complaints.

Discussion

The interviews revealed the many barriers to improving the management of HP infection and to targeting educational messages and tailoring different methods for facilitating practice change across different managed care settings. Evidence-based components of the intervention program include physician education, a notification/reminder system, and practice-based tools to facilitate change and minimize workload.

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