Rudolph Suba, Hiscock Harriet, Price Anna, Efron Daryl, Sewell Jill, South Mike, Wake Melissa
Royal Children's Hospital, Melbourne, Parkville, Vic., Australia.
J Paediatr Child Health. 2009 Dec;45(12):704-10. doi: 10.1111/j.1440-1754.2009.01598.x. Epub 2009 Oct 26.
The newly formed Australian Paediatric Research Network (APRN) aims to facilitate general paediatricians' participation in research in secondary care settings. This (its first) project aimed to identify Australian paediatricians' top research priorities and preferred research designs.
All Australian general paediatricians were invited into a national Delphi process survey. In Stage 1, they were asked 'Thinking about your clinical practice, what are the most important research questions which need addressing?'. Using qualitative methods, a 'top 20' list of the most common, feasible research questions was generated. In Stage 2, respondents prioritised these 'top 20' research questions in terms of perceived importance to their practice, and rated their interest in participating in various types of research.
A total of 685 (68%) of 1006 paediatricians completed the baseline survey, with 209 paediatricians contributing 430 Stage 1 research questions. Of these, 128 (30%) had not been addressed in the literature and were researchable in the secondary care outpatient setting. The top five questions ranked in Stage 2 by 348 paediatricians were obesity management (two questions), long-term ADHD educational outcomes, autism spectrum outcomes, and prophylactic antibiotics in preventing urinary tract infections. Paediatricians were willing to participate in research designs, including longitudinal research (75%) and randomised trials (64%).
Australian paediatricians are interested in research, and their ideas can provide direction for APRN and potentially other networks in Australia. Many of the questions generated could not be easily answered by traditional biomedical and clinical research methods, highlighting the potential benefit of practice-based research networks.
新成立的澳大利亚儿科研究网络(APRN)旨在促进普通儿科医生参与二级医疗环境中的研究。该(其首个)项目旨在确定澳大利亚儿科医生的首要研究重点和首选研究设计。
邀请所有澳大利亚普通儿科医生参与一项全国性德尔菲法流程调查。在第一阶段,询问他们“考虑到你的临床实践,需要解决的最重要的研究问题是什么?”。采用定性方法,生成了一份最常见、可行的研究问题“前20名”清单。在第二阶段,受访者根据对其实践的重要性对这些“前20名”研究问题进行排序,并对参与各类研究的兴趣进行评分。
1006名儿科医生中有685名(68%)完成了基线调查,209名儿科医生提出了430个第一阶段研究问题。其中,128个(30%)问题尚未在文献中得到解决,且在二级医疗门诊环境中具有研究可行性。348名儿科医生在第二阶段排名前五的问题是肥胖管理(两个问题)、注意力缺陷多动障碍(ADHD)长期教育成果、自闭症谱系结果以及预防性抗生素预防尿路感染。儿科医生愿意参与的研究设计包括纵向研究(75%)和随机试验(64%)。
澳大利亚儿科医生对研究感兴趣,他们的想法可为APRN以及澳大利亚其他潜在网络提供方向。所提出的许多问题难以通过传统生物医学和临床研究方法轻易回答,这凸显了基于实践的研究网络的潜在益处。