培训哥伦比亚、墨西哥和秘鲁的初级卫生保健提供者,以加强酒精筛查:实施战略的混合方法过程评估。

Implementation research and practice Pub Date : 2022-07-15 eCollection Date: 2022-01-01 DOI:10.1177/26334895221112693
Daša Kokole, Eva Jané-Llopis, Guillermina Natera Rey, Natalia Bautista Aguilar, Perla Sonia Medina Aguilar, Juliana Mejía-Trujillo, Katherine Mora, Natalia Restrepo, Ines Bustamante, Marina Piazza, Amy O'Donnell, Adriana Solovei, Liesbeth Mercken, Christiane Sybille Schmidt, Hugo Lopez-Pelayo, Silvia Matrai, Fleur Braddick, Antoni Gual, Jürgen Rehm, Peter Anderson, Hein de Vries
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引用次数: 2

摘要

背景:SCALA研究的初步结果表明,在哥伦比亚、墨西哥和秘鲁,培训初级卫生保健提供者是增加酒精筛查的有效实施策略,但没有证据表明与较短的培训部门相比,该标准的表现更优。本文通过检验与培训相关的过程评估指标与酒精筛查实践的关系来阐述这些结果。方法:采用收敛性和探索性混合方法设计。数据来源包括培训文件、培训后问卷、观察表、自我报告表和访谈。对结果测量提供者的酒精筛查的可用定量数据进行了比较。结果:培训覆盖率很高:352名提供者(占所有合格提供者的72.3%)参加了一次或多次培训或加强课程。各国在会期长短上的差异反映了对提供者先前专题知识和经验的适应。总体而言,49%的与会者在实践中进行了酒精筛查。接受更高剂量与筛查呈正相关,但标准和短训练臂之间没有差异。尽管培训课程受到了参与者的好评,但对培训的满意度和对实践的感知效用与筛选无关。职业,而不是年龄或性别,与筛查有关:在哥伦比亚和墨西哥,医生和心理学家更有可能进行筛查(尽管后者只占样本的一小部分),在秘鲁,只有心理学家。结论:SCALA培训计划受到参与者的好评,并导致一半的参与提供者在其初级卫生保健实践中进行酒精筛查。接受的剂量和专业角色是在实践中进行酒精筛查的关键因素。简明语言总结:初级卫生保健提供者可以在检测咨询患者中的重度饮酒者方面发挥重要作用,培训可以成为增加酒精筛查和检测的有效实施策略。现有的培训文献主要侧重于评估高收入国家的培训,或评估其有效性,而不是实施情况。作为SCALA(拉丁美洲酒精使用障碍预防和管理的扩大)研究的一部分,我们评估了培训作为在中等收入背景下加强初级卫生保健酒精筛查的实施策略。总体而言,72.3%的合格提供者参加了培训,49%的培训参与者在参加培训后在实践中进行了酒精筛查。我们的过程评估表明,有足够时间练习的简单干预,适应有限的提供者可用性,是平衡培训可行性和有效性的最佳选择;加强会议在组织或结构支持较少的情况下尤为重要;在执行期间不断改进培训是必要的。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

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Training primary health care providers in Colombia, Mexico and Peru to increase alcohol screening: Mixed-methods process evaluation of implementation strategy.

Background: Initial results from the SCALA study demonstrated that training primary health care providers is an effective implementation strategy to increase alcohol screening in Colombia, Mexico and Peru, but did not show evidence of superior performance for the standard compared to the shorter training arm. This paper elaborates on those outcomes by examining the relationship of training-related process evaluation indicators with the alcohol screening practice.

Methods: A mix of convergent and exploratory mixed-methods design was employed. Data sources included training documentation, post-training questionnaires, observation forms, self-report forms and interviews. Available quantitative data were compared on outcome measure - providers' alcohol screening.

Results: Training reach was high: three hundred fifty-two providers (72.3% of all eligible) participated in one or more training or booster sessions. Country differences in session length reflected adaptation to previous topic knowledge and experience of the providers. Overall, 49% of attendees conducted alcohol screening in practice. A higher dose received was positively associated with screening, but there was no difference between standard and short training arms. Although the training sessions were well received by participants, satisfaction with training and perceived utility for practice were not associated with screening. Profession, but not age or gender, was associated with screening: in Colombia and Mexico, doctors and psychologists were more likely to screen (although the latter represented only a small proportion of the sample) and in Peru, only psychologists.

Conclusions: The SCALA training programme was well received by the participants and led to half of the participating providers conducting alcohol screening in their primary health care practice. The dose received and the professional role were the key factors associated with conducting the alcohol screening in practice.Plain Language Summary: Primary health care providers can play an important role in detecting heavy drinkers among their consulting patients, and training can be an effective implementation strategy to increase alcohol screening and detection. Existing training literature predominantly focuses on evaluating trainings in high-income countries, or evaluating their effectiveness rather than implementation. As part of SCALA (Scale-up of Prevention and Management of Alcohol Use Disorders in Latin America) study, we evaluated training as implementation strategy to increase alcohol screening in primary health care in a middle-income context. Overall, 72.3% of eligible providers attended the training and 49% of training attendees conducted alcohol screening in practice after attending the training. Our process evaluation suggests that simple intervention with sufficient time to practice, adapted to limited provider availability, is optimal to balance training feasibility and effectiveness; that booster sessions are especially important in context with lower organizational or structural support; and that ongoing training refinement during the implementation period is necessary.

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