Holtrop Jodi Summers, Dosh Steven A, Torres Trissa, Thum Yeow Meng
Department of Family Medicine, College of Human Medicine, Michigan State University, East Lansing, Michigan 48824, USA.
Am J Prev Med. 2008 Nov;35(5 Suppl):S365-72. doi: 10.1016/j.amepre.2008.08.012.
Tobacco use, unhealthy diet, physical inactivity, and risky alcohol use are leading causes of preventable death. As there are many barriers that prevent primary care clinicians from effectively assisting patients with these behaviors, connecting patients with health behavior resources may reduce these unhealthy behaviors.
A new adjunct role in primary care practice, the community health educator referral liaison (CHERL), was tested in 15 practices in three Michigan communities. All practices were advised how to access this liaison, and nine practices were randomly selected to receive support to develop a systematic referral process. Adult patients needing improvement in at least one of the four unhealthy behaviors were eligible for referral. The CHERL contacted referred patients by telephone; assessed health risks; provided health behavior-change counseling, referral to other resources, or both; and sent patient progress reports to referring clinicians. Data were collected from February 2006 through July 2007.
The CHERLs received 797 referrals over 8 months, a referral rate of 0%-2% per practice. Among referred patients, 55% enrolled, and 61% of those participated in multiple-session telephone counseling; 85% were referred to additional resources. Among patients enrolling, improvements (p<0.001) were reported at 6 months for BMI, dietary patterns, alcohol use, tobacco use, health status, and days of limited activity in the past month.
The results of this study suggest that through relationships with practices, patients, and community resources, these liaisons successfully facilitated patients' behavior change. The CHERL role may fill a gap in promoting healthy behaviors in primary care practices and merits further exploration.
吸烟、不健康饮食、缺乏体育锻炼和危险饮酒是可预防死亡的主要原因。由于存在诸多障碍,阻碍基层医疗临床医生有效帮助患者改变这些行为,因此为患者提供健康行为资源或许可以减少这些不健康行为。
在密歇根州三个社区的15家医疗机构中,对基层医疗实践中的一个新的辅助角色——社区健康教育转诊联络人(CHERL)进行了测试。所有医疗机构都被告知如何联系该联络人,随机选择了9家医疗机构,为其提供支持以建立系统的转诊流程。需要在四种不健康行为中至少改善一种的成年患者符合转诊条件。CHERL通过电话联系转诊患者;评估健康风险;提供健康行为改变咨询、转介到其他资源或两者兼而有之;并将患者进展报告发送给转诊临床医生。数据收集时间为2006年2月至2007年7月。
CHERL在8个月内收到797次转诊,每家医疗机构的转诊率为0%-2%。在转诊患者中,55%登记参加,其中61%参加了多节次电话咨询;85%被转介到其他资源。在登记的患者中,6个月时报告在体重指数、饮食模式、饮酒、吸烟、健康状况以及过去一个月活动受限天数方面有改善(p<0.001)。
本研究结果表明,通过与医疗机构、患者和社区资源建立联系,这些联络人成功促进了患者行为的改变。CHERL这一角色可能填补了基层医疗实践中促进健康行为的空白,值得进一步探索。