Golin Carol E, Smith Scott R, Reif Susan
Department of Medicine, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, NC, USA.
J Gen Intern Med. 2004 Jan;19(1):16-27. doi: 10.1111/j.1525-1497.2004.21151.x.
National guidelines recommend that practitioners assess and reinforce patient adherence when prescribing antiretroviral (ART) medications, but the extent to which physicians do this routinely is unknown.
To assess the adherence counseling practices of physicians caring for patients with HIV/AIDS in North Carolina and to determine characteristics associated with providing routine adherence counseling.
A statewide self-administered survey.
All physicians in North Carolina who prescribed a protease inhibitor (PI) during 1999. Among the 589 surveys sent, 369 were returned for a response rate of 63%. The 190 respondents who reported prescribing a PI in the last year comprised the study sample.
Physicians reported how often they carried out each of 16 adherence counseling behaviors as well as demographics, practice characteristics, and attitudes.
On average, physicians reported spending 13 minutes counseling patients when starting a new 3-drug ART regimen. The vast majority performed basic but not more extensive adherence counseling; half reported carrying out 7 or fewer of 16 adherence counseling behaviors "most" or "all of the time." Physicians who reported conducting more adherence counseling were more likely to be infectious disease specialists, care for more HIV-positive patients, have more time allocated for an HIV visit, and to perceive that they had enough time, reimbursement, skill, and office space to counsel. After also controlling for the amount of reimbursement and availability of space for counseling, physicians who were significantly more likely to perform a greater number of adherence counseling practices were those who 1). cared for a greater number of HIV/AIDS patients; 2). had more time allocated for an HIV physical; 3). felt more adequately skilled; and 4). had more positive attitudes toward ART.
This first investigation of adherence counseling practices in HIV/AIDS suggests that physicians caring for patients with HIV/AIDS need more training and time allocated to provide antiretroviral adherence counseling services.
国家指南建议,从业者在开具抗逆转录病毒(ART)药物处方时应评估并加强患者的依从性,但医生常规进行此项工作的程度尚不清楚。
评估北卡罗来纳州为艾滋病毒/艾滋病患者提供治疗的医生的依从性咨询实践,并确定与提供常规依从性咨询相关的特征。
一项全州范围的自我管理调查。
北卡罗来纳州所有在1999年开具过蛋白酶抑制剂(PI)的医生。在发出的589份调查问卷中,有369份被退回,回复率为63%。去年报告开具过PI的190名受访者构成了研究样本。
医生报告他们进行16种依从性咨询行为的频率,以及人口统计学、执业特征和态度。
平均而言,医生报告在开始新的三联抗逆转录病毒治疗方案时,花费13分钟为患者提供咨询。绝大多数医生进行了基本但并非更广泛的依从性咨询;一半的医生报告在“大多数”或“所有时间”进行了16种依从性咨询行为中的7种或更少。报告进行更多依从性咨询的医生更有可能是传染病专科医生,照顾更多艾滋病毒阳性患者,有更多时间用于艾滋病毒诊疗,并且认为自己有足够的时间、报销费用、技能和办公空间进行咨询。在控制了报销金额和咨询空间的可用性之后,更有可能进行更多依从性咨询实践的医生是那些:1). 照顾更多艾滋病毒/艾滋病患者的医生;2). 有更多时间用于艾滋病毒体检的医生;3). 感觉技能更充分的医生;4). 对抗逆转录病毒治疗态度更积极的医生。
这项对艾滋病毒/艾滋病依从性咨询实践的首次调查表明,为艾滋病毒/艾滋病患者提供治疗的医生需要更多培训和时间来提供抗逆转录病毒依从性咨询服务。