Sipahi Oguz Resat, Tasbakan Meltem, Pullukcu Husnu, Arda Bilgin, Yamazhan Tansu, Mizrakci Serpil, Senol Sebnem, Atalay Sabri, Koseli Demet, Arsu Guray, Calik Sebnem, Sipahi Hilal, Buke Cagri, Ulusoy Sercan
Department of Infectious Diseases and Clinical Microbiology, Ege University Faculty of Medicine, Bornova, Izmir, Turkey.
Int J Infect Dis. 2007 Nov;11(6):518-23. doi: 10.1016/j.ijid.2007.02.003. Epub 2007 Apr 27.
Infectious diseases (ID) trainees should be familiar with duties relevant to consultation practice. In this study we aimed to analyze the ID trainee night/weekend shift consultation process in terms of consultant characteristics, types of recommendations, and compliance with recommendations.
All consultations performed by ID trainees on the night shift and at the weekends between 10 June and 10 August 2004 were recorded prospectively on standardized forms. Infectious diseases specialists assessed the appropriateness of recommendations the day after each consultation. Recommendations were considered complied with if they were carried out within 72 hours of the consultation.
Of 440 consultations, 163 were for a clinically diagnosed infection (without specific antibiotic request) and 79 were for treatment continuation. Overall, 152 consultations were for requesting specific antibiotic(s), and 327 antibiotics were recommended or approved in 270 consultations. Eight of these recommendations were inappropriate. Overall compliance to ID recommendations was 75.3% (418/555). In univariate analysis, the compliance rate to non-treatment recommendations (microbiologic cultures, radiology, biochemistry, etc.) was found to be lower than the rate of compliance to antibiotic recommendations (186/308 vs. 232/247, p<0.05). In addition, compliance to recommendations made by the first-year trainees was lower than to the recommendations made by the other trainees. In logistic regression analysis only recommendations including antibiotic treatment was associated with higher compliance (p=0.0001, odds ratio=10.2, 95% CI=5.7-18.3).
ID trainees are capable of evaluating patients and recommending appropriate antibiotics. Methodologies to improve the compliance to non-treatment-based recommendations and optimizing antibiotic selection seem to be necessary.
感染性疾病(ID)培训学员应熟悉与会诊实践相关的职责。在本研究中,我们旨在从会诊医生特征、建议类型以及建议的依从性方面分析ID培训学员的夜间/周末轮班会诊过程。
2004年6月10日至8月10日期间,ID培训学员在夜间和周末进行的所有会诊均采用标准化表格进行前瞻性记录。感染性疾病专家在每次会诊后的第二天评估建议的适当性。如果建议在会诊后72小时内得到执行,则视为已依从。
在440次会诊中,163次是针对临床诊断的感染(无特定抗生素请求),79次是为了继续治疗。总体而言,152次会诊是为了请求使用特定抗生素,在270次会诊中推荐或批准了327种抗生素。其中8条建议不合适。对ID建议的总体依从率为75.3%(418/555)。在单因素分析中,发现对非治疗建议(微生物培养、放射学、生物化学等)的依从率低于对抗生素建议的依从率(186/308对232/247,p<0.05)。此外,一年级培训学员提出的建议的依从率低于其他培训学员提出的建议。在逻辑回归分析中,只有包括抗生素治疗的建议与更高的依从性相关(p=0.0001,优势比=10.2,95%CI=5.7-18.3)。
ID培训学员有能力评估患者并推荐合适的抗生素。似乎有必要采取方法提高对非基于治疗的建议的依从性并优化抗生素选择。