初级保健临床医生对RTIs患儿的抗生素处方决策:一项定性访谈研究

J. Horwood, C. Cabral, A. Hay, J. Ingram
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引用次数: 99

摘要

背景呼吸道感染(RTIs)是儿童主要的初级保健挑战,因为它们很常见且费用昂贵,其诊断、预后和管理存在不确定性,并且过度使用抗生素导致疾病药物化和细菌耐药性。目的探讨卫生保健专业人员(HCP)对儿童呼吸道感染的诊断和抗生素处方决策。设计与设置对22名全科医生和6名护士进行半结构化访谈。hcp是从六个全科诊所和一个无预约中心招募的,服务于贫困和富裕地区的混合。方法将访谈录音、转录,导入NVivo 9系统,进行专题分析。结果HCPs在症状和临床检查结果方面存在差异,这些发现用于确定他们认为可能受益于抗生素的儿童。他们的诊断推理和临床对抗生素需求的评估采用了双重过程,将最初的快速评估与随后的详细演绎推理相结合。HCPs报告了对大多数轻微和严重RTIs的诊断和管理的信心。然而,残留的预后不确定性,特别是对于中度疾病严重程度组,经常导致抗生素处方以减轻随后疾病恶化的感知风险。一些HCPs认为需要更多的儿科培训来辅助治疗决策。该研究还确定了一些影响处方的非临床因素。结论预后不确定性仍是影响医务人员抗生素处方的重要因素。在识别严重呼吸道感染方面的经验和培训,以及帮助医护人员识别未来有疾病恶化风险的儿童的更多证据,可能支持医护人员识别最可能和最不可能从抗生素中获益的儿童。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Primary care clinician antibiotic prescribing decisions in consultations for children with RTIs: a qualitative interview study
Background Respiratory tract infections (RTIs) are a major primary care challenge in children because they are common and costly, there is uncertainty regarding their diagnosis, prognosis, and management, and the overuse of antibiotics leads to illness medicalisation and bacterial resistance. Aim To investigate healthcare professional (HCP) diagnostic and antibiotic prescribing decisions for children with RTIs. Design and setting Semi-structured interviews conducted with 22 GPs and six nurses. HCPs were recruited from six general practices and one walk-in centre, serving a mix of deprived and affluent areas. Method Interviews were audiorecorded, transcribed, imported into NVivo 9, and analysed thematically. Results HCPs varied in the symptom and clinical examination findings used to identify children they thought might benefit from antibiotics. Their diagnostic reasoning and assessment of perceived clinical need for antibiotics used a dual process, combining an initial rapid assessment with subsequent detailed deductive reasoning. HCPs reported confidence diagnosing and managing most minor and severe RTIs. However, residual prognostic uncertainty, particularly for the intermediate illness severity group, frequently led to antibiotic prescribing to mitigate the perceived risk of subsequent illness deterioration. Some HCPs perceived a need for more paediatrics training to aid treatment decisions. The study also identified a number of non-clinical factors influencing prescribing. Conclusion Prognostic uncertainty remains an important driver of HCPs’ antibiotic prescribing. Experience and training in recognising severe RTIs, together with more evidence to help HCPs identify the children at risk of future illness deterioration, may support HCPs’ identification of the children most and least likely to benefit from antibiotics.
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