慢性病患者国际调查(PaRIS 调查):全科医生不参与对挪威患者数据代表性的影响。

IF 2.7 3区 医学 Q2 HEALTH CARE SCIENCES & SERVICES BMC Health Services Research Pub Date : 2024-10-18 DOI:10.1186/s12913-024-11751-0
Oyvind Bjertnaes, Kjersti E Skudal, Michael J van den Berg, Ian Porter, Olaf Holmboe, Rebecka M Norman, Hilde H Iversen, Lina H Ellingsen-Dalskau, Jose M Valderas
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:慢性病患者国际调查(OECD-PaRIS 调查)旨在系统地收集慢性病患者的患者报告经历(PREMs)、治疗结果(PROMs)和这些结果的潜在预测因素,以及专业人员提供的医疗保健信息。在此类患者调查中,如果参与调查的全科医生的患者群体与未参与调查的全科医生的患者群体存在显著差异,则需要平衡多层次(嵌套)方法的优势与 "在提供者内部 "对患者进行抽样调查的潜在偏差。我们的目标是评估全科医生不参与调查对挪威慢性病患者国际调查(OECD-PaRIS调查)患者数据代表性的影响:方法:为了对PaRIS首次主要调查的各个方面进行测试,在此之前进行了一次实地试验,本文报告的是挪威部分的试验情况。在2022年的挪威实地试验中,我们随机抽取并调查了75名全科医生和125名45岁及以上的患者,无论他们的全科医生是否也参与了这项研究。全科医生是从包括所有全科医生的全国登记册中抽取的。调查主要采用数字化方式,但我们也向非数字化患者和未回复的数字化患者发送了邮寄问卷。我们根据全科医生的参与情况对全科医生和患者的特征以及患者报告的经历和结果进行了双变量分析,并以PREMs/PROMs为因变量,参与情况为独立变量的多元线性回归作为补充,对重要的患者因素进行了调整:在抽样的 75 名全科医生中,有 17 名全科医生参与(22.7%),在 2 015 名患者中,有 993 名患者参与(49.3%)。未回复的全科医生的 7,080 名患者中有 3,347 人回复(47.3%)。参与调查的全科医生为慢性病患者提供的以患者为中心的协调护理(p = 0.017)、过去 12 个月在全科医生办公室的总体体验(p = 0.004)、精神健康(p = 0.039)和心理健康(p = 0.013)均明显优于未参与调查的全科医生。参与试验的全科医生与未参与试验的全科医生在患者报告的经历和结果方面的原始差异在0-100分之间,从1.5分到2.9分不等,在对病例组合进行调整后,差异从2.2分到3.0分不等:挪威的实地试验表明,基于PaRIS调查参与者的估算结果可能会在总体水平上略微高估患者报告的就医经历和结果,因此需要在各国内部和各国之间开展更多研究,以发现并解决这一潜在偏差。
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International survey of people living with chronic conditions (PaRIS survey): effects of general practitioner non-participation on the representativeness of the Norwegian patient data.

Background: The International Survey of People living with Chronic Conditions (OECD-PaRIS survey), aims to systematically gather patient-reported experiences (PREMs) and - outcomes (PROMs) and potential predictors for these outcomes for persons with chronic conditions as well as information from professionals about health care provided. In such patient surveys, the advantages of a multilevel (nested) approach in which patients are sampled 'within providers' need to be balanced against the potential for bias if patient populations from participating GPs significantly differ from those of non-participating GPs. The objective was to assess the effects of general practitioner (GP) non-participation on the representativeness of the Norwegian patient data of the International Survey of People living with Chronic Conditions (OECD-PaRIS survey).

Methods: To test all aspects of the first main PaRIS survey, it was preceded by a field trial which this paper reports on the Norwegian part of. For the Norwegian part of the field trial in 2022, we randomly sampled and surveyed 75 GPs and 125 patients 45 years and older for each GP, regardless of whether their GP were also participating in the study. GPs were sampled from a national register that included all GPs. The surveys were primarily digital, but we sent postal questionnaires to non-digital patients and non-responding digital patients. We compared GP and patient characteristics as well as patient-reported experiences and outcomes according to GP participation status in bivariate analysis, supplemented with multiple linear regressions with PREMs/PROMs as dependent variables and participation status as independent adjusting for significant patient factors.

Results: 17 of 75 sampled GPs participated (22.7%), of which 993 of 2,015 patients responded (49.3%). 3,347 of 7,080 patients of non-responding GPs answered (47.3%). Persons with chronic conditions from participating GPs reported significantly better patient-centred coordinated care (p = 0.017), overall experiences with the GP office the last 12 months (p = 0.004), mental well-being (p = 0.039) and mental health (p = 0.013) than patients from non-participating GPs. The raw differences between participating and non-participating GPs on patient-reported experiences and - outcomes varied from 1.5 to 2.9 points on a 0-100 scale, and from 2.2 to 3.0 after adjustment for case-mix.

Conclusions: The Norwegian field trial indicates that estimates based on participants in the PaRIS survey may modestly overestimate patient-reported experiences and -outcomes at the aggregated level and the need for more research within and across countries to identify and address this potential bias.

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来源期刊
BMC Health Services Research
BMC Health Services Research 医学-卫生保健
CiteScore
4.40
自引率
7.10%
发文量
1372
审稿时长
6 months
期刊介绍: BMC Health Services Research is an open access, peer-reviewed journal that considers articles on all aspects of health services research, including delivery of care, management of health services, assessment of healthcare needs, measurement of outcomes, allocation of healthcare resources, evaluation of different health markets and health services organizations, international comparative analysis of health systems, health economics and the impact of health policies and regulations.
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