Peyrot M, Rubin R R, Lauritzen T, Skovlund S E, Snoek F J, Matthews D R, Landgraf R
Dept. of Sociology, Loyola College, 45021 North Charles Street, Baltimore, MD 21210-2699, USA.
Diabetologia. 2006 Feb;49(2):279-88. doi: 10.1007/s00125-005-0048-8. Epub 2006 Jan 6.
AIMS/HYPOTHESIS: We assessed country-level and individual-level patterns in patient and provider perceptions of diabetes care.
The study used a cross-sectional design with face-to-face or telephone interviews of diabetic patients and healthcare providers in 13 countries from Asia, Australia, Europe and North America. Participants were randomly selected adults with type 1 or type 2 diabetes (n=5,104), and randomly selected diabetes-care providers, including primary-care physicians (n=2,070), diabetes specialist physicians (n=635) and nurses (n=1,122). Multivariate analysis was used to examine the relationships between outcomes and both country and respondent characteristics, and the interaction between these two factors.
Providers rated chronic-care systems and remuneration for chronic care as mediocre. Patients reported that ease of access to care was high, but not without financial barriers. Patients reported moderate levels of collaboration among providers, and providers indicated that several specialist disciplines were not readily available to them. Patients reported high levels of collaboration with providers in their own care. Provider endorsement of primary prevention strategies for type 2 diabetes was high. Patients with fewer socio-economic resources and more diabetes complications had lower access (and/or higher barriers) to care and lower quality of patient-provider collaboration. Countries differed significantly for all outcomes, and the relationships between respondent characteristics and outcomes varied by country.
CONCLUSIONS/INTERPRETATION: There is much need for improvement in applying the chronic-care model to the treatment and prevention of diabetes in all of the countries studied. Each country must develop its own priorities for improving diabetes care and comparison with other countries can help identify strengths as well as weaknesses.
目的/假设:我们评估了国家层面和个体层面患者及医疗服务提供者对糖尿病护理的认知模式。
本研究采用横断面设计,对来自亚洲、澳大利亚、欧洲和北美的13个国家的糖尿病患者和医疗服务提供者进行面对面或电话访谈。参与者为随机选取的1型或2型糖尿病成年患者(n = 5104),以及随机选取的糖尿病护理提供者,包括初级保健医生(n = 2070)、糖尿病专科医生(n = 635)和护士(n = 1122)。采用多变量分析来检验结果与国家及受访者特征之间的关系,以及这两个因素之间的相互作用。
医疗服务提供者认为慢性病护理系统和慢性病护理报酬水平一般。患者报告称获得护理服务较为便捷,但存在经济障碍。患者报告称医疗服务提供者之间的协作水平中等,且医疗服务提供者表示他们无法轻易获得多个专科领域的服务。患者报告称在自身护理中与医疗服务提供者的协作水平较高。医疗服务提供者对2型糖尿病一级预防策略的认可度较高。社会经济资源较少且糖尿病并发症较多的患者获得护理服务的机会较低(和/或障碍较高),且患者与医疗服务提供者之间的协作质量较低。所有结果在不同国家之间存在显著差异,且受访者特征与结果之间的关系因国家而异。
结论/解读:在所研究的所有国家中,将慢性病护理模式应用于糖尿病治疗和预防方面有很大的改进空间。每个国家都必须制定自己改善糖尿病护理的优先事项,与其他国家进行比较有助于找出优势和不足。