Gazmararian Julie A, Oster Natalia V, Green Diane C, Schuessler Linda, Howell Kelly, Davis Janona, Krovisky Marybeth, Warburton Samuel W
Emory Center on Health Outcomes and Quality, Department of Health Policy and Management, Atlanta, Georgia 30322, USA.
Am J Prev Med. 2002 Nov;23(4):246-53. doi: 10.1016/s0749-3797(02)00512-3.
To assess the proportion of primary care physician (PCP) offices meeting vaccine storage guidelines, identify factors associated with low compliance, and evaluate whether a quality improvement (QI) activity improves compliance.
We examined compliance with guidelines of 721 PCP offices contracted with a national managed care organization in four cities. A QI activity (educational materials, written feedback, and distribution of thermometers) was conducted at baseline and a follow-up assessment occurred within 3 months.
Baseline compliance was relatively high, with >80% adherence to most guidelines. For example, 89% of offices had a thermometer; and 83% of temperatures were appropriate. Most units did not have vaccines stored in the door or food/biological materials in the unit (80% and 96%, respectively). Almost all vaccines had not expired. Multivariate analysis indicated that practice location, type of physician, participation in vaccine programs, and using guidelines were associated with compliance. For most of the compliance measures, pediatric offices had the highest compliance. Adherence to guidelines improved after the QI activity; the net change between pre- and post-intervention ranged from +1% to +19%. Measurements most impacted included temperature log posted (19% improvement in refrigerator; 16% improvement in freezer) and no vaccine stored in refrigerator door (14% improvement).
Despite generally high compliance, there are some opportunities for improvement in how PCPs store vaccines. Incorporating an intervention program in existing practice activities can improve storage practices. Further research is needed to determine the possible benefits of targeting interventions to certain types of providers who may be less knowledgeable about recommended guidelines.
评估基层医疗医生(PCP)办公室符合疫苗储存指南的比例,确定与低依从性相关的因素,并评估质量改进(QI)活动是否能提高依从性。
我们检查了与四个城市的一家全国性管理式医疗组织签约的721家PCP办公室对指南的依从情况。在基线时开展了一项QI活动(发放教育材料、书面反馈和分发温度计),并在3个月内进行了随访评估。
基线依从性相对较高,大多数指南的依从率超过80%。例如,89%的办公室有温度计;83%的温度适宜。大多数单位没有将疫苗存放在门内,单位内也没有食品/生物材料(分别为80%和96%)。几乎所有疫苗都未过期。多变量分析表明,执业地点、医生类型、参与疫苗项目情况以及使用指南与依从性相关。对于大多数依从性指标,儿科办公室的依从性最高。QI活动后对指南的依从性有所提高;干预前后的净变化范围为+1%至+19%。受影响最大的测量指标包括张贴温度记录(冰箱温度记录改善19%;冰柜温度记录改善16%)以及冰箱门内不存放疫苗(改善14%)。
尽管总体依从性较高,但PCP储存疫苗的方式仍有一些改进空间。将干预项目纳入现有执业活动可改善储存做法。需要进一步研究以确定针对某些可能对推荐指南了解较少的提供者进行干预可能带来的益处。