Do patients matter? Contribution of patient and care provider characteristics to the adherence of general practitioners and midwives to the Dutch national guidelines on imminent miscarriage.

M Fleuren, M van der Meulen, D Wijkel
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引用次数: 6

Abstract

Objective: To assess the relative contribution of patient and care provider characteristics to the adherence of general practitioners (GPs) and midwives to two specific recommendations in the Dutch national guidelines on imminent miscarriage. The study focused on performing physical examinations at the first contact and making a follow up appointment after 10 days because these are essential recommendations and there was much variation in adherence between different groups of providers.

Design: Prospective recording by GPs and midwives of care provided for patients with symptoms of imminent miscarriage.

Setting: General practices and midwifery practices in the Netherlands.

Subjects: 73 GPs and 38 midwives who agreed to adhere to the guidelines; 391 patients were recorded during a period of 12 months.

Main measures: Adherence to physical examinations and making a follow up appointment were measured as part of a larger prospective recording study on adherence to the guidelines on imminent miscarriage. Patient and care provider characteristics were obtained from case recordings and interviews, respectively. Multilevel analysis was performed to assess the contribution of several care provider and patient characteristics to adherence to two selected recommendations: the number of recommended physical examinations at the first contact and the number of days before a follow up appointment took place.

Results: In the multilevel model explaining variance in adherence to physical examinations, the care provider's acceptance of the recommendations was the most important factor. Severity of symptoms and referral to an obstetrician were significant factors at the patient level. In the model for follow up appointments the characteristics of the care provider were less important. Referral to an obstetrician and probability diagnosis were significant factors at the patient level.

Conclusions: The study showed that characteristics of both the patient and care provider contribute to the variability in adherence. Furthermore, the contribution of the characteristics differed per recommendation. It is therefore advised that the contribution of both patient and care provider characteristics per recommendation should be carefully examined. If implementation is to be successful, strategies should be developed to address these specific contributions.

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病人重要吗?病人和护理提供者的特点,以坚持全科医生和助产士荷兰国家指导方针迫在眉睫的流产贡献。
目的:评估患者和护理提供者特征对全科医生(全科医生)和助产士对荷兰国家临危流产指南中两项具体建议的依从性的相对贡献。这项研究的重点是在第一次接触时进行身体检查,并在10天后进行随访预约,因为这些都是必要的建议,而且不同的提供者群体在依从性方面存在很大差异。设计:由全科医生和助产士前瞻性记录为有即将流产症状的患者提供的护理。背景:荷兰的一般实践和助产实践。受试者:73名全科医生和38名助产士同意遵守指南;在12个月的时间里记录了391例患者。主要措施:遵守身体检查和随访预约被测量作为一个更大的前瞻性记录研究的一部分,对即将流产的指导方针的遵守。分别从病例记录和访谈中获得患者和护理提供者的特征。进行多水平分析,以评估几个护理提供者和患者特征对依从两项选定建议的贡献:第一次接触时推荐的体检次数和随访预约前的天数。结果:在解释体检依从性差异的多层次模型中,护理提供者对建议的接受程度是最重要的因素。症状的严重程度和产科医生的转诊是患者水平的重要因素。在随访预约模型中,护理提供者的特征不太重要。转诊产科医生和概率诊断是患者水平的重要因素。结论:研究表明,患者和护理提供者的特点都有助于依从性的变化。此外,每个推荐的特征的贡献不同。因此,建议应仔细检查每个推荐的患者和护理提供者特征的贡献。如果要成功地执行,就应该制定战略来处理这些具体的贡献。
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