Bosch-Capblanch X, Abba K, Prictor M, Garner P
International Health Research Group, Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine, Pembroke Place, Liverpool, UK L35QA.
Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2007 Apr 18;2007(2):CD004808. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD004808.pub3.
Contracts are a verbal or written agreement that a patient makes with themselves, with healthcare practitioners, or with carers, where participants commit to a set of behaviours related to the care of a patient. Contracts aim to improve the patients' adherence to treatment or health promotion programmes.
To assess the effects of contracts between patients and healthcare practitioners on patients' adherence to treatment, prevention and health promotion activities, the stated health or behaviour aims in the contract, patient satisfaction or other relevant outcomes, including health practitioner behaviour and views, health status, reported harms, costs, or denial of treatment as a result of the contract.
We searched: the Cochrane Consumers and Communication Review Group's Specialised Register (in May 2004); the Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials (CENTRAL), (The Cochrane Library 2004, issue 1); MEDLINE 1966 to May 2004); EMBASE (1980 to May 2004); PsycINFO (1966 to May 2004); CINAHL (1982 to May 2004); Dissertation Abstracts. A: Humanities and Social Sciences (1966 to May 2004); Sociological Abstracts (1963 to May 2004); UK National Research Register (2000 to May 2004); and C2-SPECTR, Campbell Collaboration (1950 to May 2004).
We included randomised controlled trials comparing the effects of contracts between healthcare practitioners and patients or their carers on patient adherence, applied to diagnostic procedures, therapeutic regimens or any health promotion or illness prevention initiative for patients. Contracts had to specify at least one activity to be observed and a commitment of adherence to it. We included trials comparing contracts with routine care or any other intervention.
Selection and quality assessment of trials were conducted independently by two review authors; single data extraction was checked by a statistician. We present the data as a narrative summary, given the wide range of interventions, participants, settings and outcomes, grouped by the health problem being addressed.
We included thirty trials, all conducted in high income countries, involving 4691 participants. Median sample size per group was 21. We examined the quality of each trial against eight standard criteria, and all trials were inadequate in relation to three or more of these standards. Trials evaluated contracts in addiction (10 trials), hypertension (4 trials), weight control (3 trials) and a variety of other areas (13 trials). Sixteen trials reported at least one outcome that showed statistically significant differences favouring the contracts group, five trials reported at least one outcome that showed differences favouring the control group and 26 trials reported at least one outcome without differences between groups. Effects on adherence were not detected when measured over longer periods.
AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: There is limited evidence that contracts can potentially contribute to improving adherence, but there is insufficient evidence from large, good quality studies to routinely recommend contracts for improving adherence to treatment or preventive health regimens.
契约是患者与自身、医疗从业者或护理人员达成的口头或书面协议,参与者在协议中承诺一系列与患者护理相关的行为。契约旨在提高患者对治疗或健康促进计划的依从性。
评估患者与医疗从业者之间的契约对患者治疗依从性、预防和健康促进活动、契约中规定的健康或行为目标、患者满意度或其他相关结果的影响,包括医疗从业者的行为和观点、健康状况、报告的危害、成本或因契约导致的治疗拒绝。
我们检索了:Cochrane消费者与沟通综述小组的专业注册库(2004年5月);Cochrane对照试验中心注册库(CENTRAL),(《Cochrane图书馆》2004年第1期);MEDLINE(1966年至2004年5月);EMBASE(1980年至2004年5月);PsycINFO(1966年至2004年5月);CINAHL(1982年至2004年5月);《论文摘要》。A:人文与社会科学(1966年至2004年5月);《社会学摘要》(1963年至2004年5月);英国国家研究注册库(2000年至2004年);以及C2-SPECTR,坎贝尔协作组织(1950年至2004年5月)。
我们纳入了比较医疗从业者与患者或其护理人员之间的契约对患者依从性影响的随机对照试验,这些契约应用于诊断程序、治疗方案或任何针对患者的健康促进或疾病预防倡议。契约必须规定至少一项要遵守的活动以及对其遵守的承诺。我们纳入了比较契约与常规护理或任何其他干预措施的试验。
试验的选择和质量评估由两位综述作者独立进行;单一数据提取由一位统计学家进行核对。鉴于干预措施、参与者、环境和结果的广泛范围,我们按所解决的健康问题进行分组,以叙述性总结的形式呈现数据。
我们纳入了30项试验,所有试验均在高收入国家进行,涉及4691名参与者。每组的样本量中位数为21。我们根据八项标准对每项试验的质量进行了评估,所有试验在三项或更多这些标准方面均存在不足。试验评估了成瘾(10项试验)、高血压(4项试验)、体重控制(3项试验)和其他各种领域(13项试验)中的契约。16项试验报告了至少一项显示契约组有统计学显著差异的结果,5项试验报告了至少一项显示对照组有差异的结果,26项试验报告了至少一项两组无差异的结果。在较长时间段内进行测量时,未检测到对依从性的影响。
有有限的证据表明契约可能有助于提高依从性,但缺乏来自大型高质量研究的充分证据来常规推荐契约以提高对治疗或预防性健康方案的依从性。