Hoff Timothy
Department of Health Policy and Management, School of Public Health, University at Albany, Rensselaer, New York, USA.
Genet Med. 2008 Jun;10(6):396-403. doi: 10.1097/GIM.0b013e3181770212.
Long-term follow-up is an increasing focus as newborn screening expands in the United States. The present study informs this issue by examining the role played by organizational culture in shaping the scope and substance of long-term follow-up in state newborn screening programs.
Qualitative interviews were conducted with 38 state newborn screening programs.
Several key cultural norms were identified within state newborn screening programs that may undermine proactive attempts to conduct long-term follow-up. These include (a) beliefs that place direct patient care and specialist care versus a public health orientation at the center of long-term follow-up; (b) an everyday emphasis on short-term follow-up that obscures the longer-term follow-up focus; and (c) the perception that others are engaged in long-term follow-up at the state level.
The findings support the importance of understanding state newborn screening program culture and how that culture may shape the scope and substance of long-term follow-up in a given state, regardless of the level of staff and resources made available to conduct these activities.
随着美国新生儿筛查范围的扩大,长期随访日益受到关注。本研究通过考察组织文化在塑造州新生儿筛查项目长期随访的范围和内容方面所起的作用,为这一问题提供参考。
对38个州新生儿筛查项目进行了定性访谈。
在州新生儿筛查项目中确定了几个关键的文化规范,这些规范可能会破坏进行长期随访的积极尝试。其中包括:(a)在长期随访中,将直接的患者护理和专科护理置于公共卫生导向之上的观念;(b)日常工作中对短期随访的重视掩盖了对长期随访的关注;(c)认为在州一级有其他人在进行长期随访。
研究结果支持了理解州新生儿筛查项目文化以及这种文化如何在特定州塑造长期随访的范围和内容的重要性,而不论开展这些活动所提供的工作人员和资源水平如何。