Nationwide Children's Hospital, and Professor Emerita, The Ohio State University College of Nursing, Columbus, Ohio 43205, USA.
Nurs Res. 2010 Jan-Feb;59(1):2-10. doi: 10.1097/NNR.0b013e3181c3b9dd.
Deployed military women have an increased risk for development of vaginitis due to extreme temperatures, primitive sanitation, hygiene and laundry facilities, and unavailable or unacceptable healthcare resources. The Women in the Military Self-Diagnosis (WMSD) and treatment kit was developed as a field-expedient solution to this problem.
The primary study aims were to evaluate the accuracy of women's self-diagnosis of vaginal symptoms and eight diagnostic algorithms and to predict potential self-medication omission and commission error rates.
Participants included 546 active duty, deployable Army (43.3%) and Navy (53.6%) women with vaginal symptoms who sought healthcare at troop medical clinics on base.In the clinic lavatory, women conducted a self-diagnosis using a sterile cotton swab to obtain vaginal fluid, a FemExam card to measure positive or negative pH and amines, and the investigator-developed WMSD Decision-Making Guide. Potential self-diagnoses were "bacterial infection" (bacterial vaginosis [BV] and/or trichomonas vaginitis [TV]), "yeast infection" (candida vaginitis [CV]), "no infection/normal," or "unclear." The Affirm VPIII laboratory reference standard was used to detect clinically significant amounts of vaginal fluid DNA for organisms associated with BV, TV, and CV.
Women's self-diagnostic accuracy was 56% for BV/TV and 69.2% for CV. False-positives would have led to a self-medication commission error rate of 20.3% for BV/TV and 8% for CV. Potential self-medication omission error rates due to false-negatives were 23.7% for BV/TV and 24.8% for CV. The positive predictive value of diagnostic algorithms ranged from 0% to 78.1% for BV/TV and 41.7% for CV.
The algorithms were based on clinical diagnostic standards. The nonspecific nature of vaginal symptoms, mixed infections, and a faulty device intended to measure vaginal pH and amines explain why none of the algorithms reached the goal of 95% accuracy. The next prototype of the WMSD kit will not include nonspecific vaginal signs and symptoms in favor of recently available point-of-care devices that identify antigens or enzymes of the causative BV, TV, and CV organisms.
由于极端温度、原始卫生设施、卫生和洗衣设施以及无法获得或无法接受的医疗保健资源,部署的女兵发生阴道炎的风险增加。妇女在军事中的自我诊断(WMSD)和治疗工具包是为解决这个问题而开发的一种现场应急解决方案。
主要研究目的是评估女性对阴道症状的自我诊断的准确性和八种诊断算法,并预测潜在的自我用药遗漏和错误率。
参与者包括 546 名有阴道症状的现役、可部署的陆军(43.3%)和海军(53.6%)女性,她们在基地的部队医务室寻求医疗保健。在诊所的浴室里,女性使用无菌棉签获取阴道分泌物,使用 FemExam 卡测量 pH 值和胺值,以及研究人员开发的 WMSD 决策指南进行自我诊断。潜在的自我诊断包括“细菌感染”(细菌性阴道炎 [BV] 和/或滴虫性阴道炎 [TV])、“酵母感染”(念珠菌阴道炎 [CV])、“无感染/正常”或“不清楚”。使用 Affirm VPIII 实验室参考标准检测与 BV、TV 和 CV 相关的临床显著量的阴道液 DNA 来检测生物体。
女性对 BV/TV 的自我诊断准确性为 56%,对 CV 的自我诊断准确性为 69.2%。假阳性将导致 BV/TV 的自我用药错误率为 20.3%,CV 为 8%。由于假阴性导致的潜在自我用药遗漏错误率为 BV/TV 为 23.7%,CV 为 24.8%。诊断算法的阳性预测值范围为 BV/TV 的 0%至 78.1%,CV 为 41.7%。
该算法基于临床诊断标准。阴道症状的非特异性、混合感染以及旨在测量阴道 pH 值和胺值的有缺陷的设备解释了为什么没有一种算法达到 95%的准确性目标。WMSD 工具包的下一个原型将不再包括非特异性阴道体征和症状,而是支持最近出现的可识别导致 BV、TV 和 CV 生物体的抗原或酶的即时护理设备。