Payne Janet M, France Kathryn E, Henley Nadine, D'Antoine Heather A, Bartu Anne E, Mutch Raewyn C, Elliott Elizabeth J, Bower Carol
Telethon Institute for Child Health Research, Centre for Child Health Research, The University of Western Australia, Perth, Australia.
J Paediatr Child Health. 2011 Oct;47(10):704-10. doi: 10.1111/j.1440-1754.2011.02037.x. Epub 2011 Mar 30.
The study aims to provide paediatricians in Western Australia (WA) with educational resources (http://www.ichr.uwa.edu.au/alcoholandpregnancy) about the prevention of prenatal alcohol exposure and fetal alcohol spectrum disorder, and assess changes in their knowledge, attitudes and practice about fetal alcohol syndrome (FAS) and alcohol consumption in pregnancy.
Following our 2004 survey of paediatricians, we developed and distributed educational resources to 159 paediatricians in WA in 2007. Six months later, we surveyed these paediatricians and compared their responses with results from 2004 using prevalence rate ratios (PRRs) and 95% confidence intervals (CIs).
Of 133 eligible paediatricians, 82 (61.7%) responded: 65.9% had seen the resources, of these 66.7% had used them and 29.6% said the resources had helped them change, or influenced their intent to change, their practice. There was no change in the proportion that knew all the essential features of FAS (18.3% in 2007; 20.0% in 2004) or had diagnosed FAS (58.5% in 2007; 58.9% in 2004). An increased proportion (75.6% in 2007; 48.9% in 2004) agreed that pregnant women should completely abstain from consuming alcohol (PRR 1.55, 95% CI 1.21-1.97). Only 21.7% (no increase from 2004) routinely asked about alcohol use when taking a pregnancy history.
We recommend that asking about alcohol use during pregnancy should be emphasised in paediatric training. Unless paediatricians' capacity to ask about alcohol consumption when taking a pregnancy history and to diagnose FAS is increased, FAS will remain under-diagnosed in Australia and opportunities for management, early intervention and prevention will be overlooked.
本研究旨在为西澳大利亚州(WA)的儿科医生提供有关预防产前酒精暴露和胎儿酒精谱系障碍的教育资源(http://www.ichr.uwa.edu.au/alcoholandpregnancy),并评估他们对胎儿酒精综合征(FAS)和孕期饮酒的知识、态度及行为的变化。
在2004年对儿科医生进行调查之后,我们于2007年为西澳大利亚州的159名儿科医生开发并分发了教育资源。六个月后,我们对这些儿科医生进行了调查,并使用患病率比(PRRs)和95%置信区间(CIs)将他们的回答与2004年的结果进行比较。
在133名符合条件的儿科医生中,82名(61.7%)做出了回应:65.9%看过这些资源,其中66.7%使用过,29.6%表示这些资源帮助他们改变或影响了他们改变行为的意愿。知晓FAS所有基本特征的比例(2007年为18.3%;2004年为20.0%)或诊断出FAS的比例(2007年为58.5%;2004年为58.9%)没有变化。同意孕妇应完全戒酒的比例有所增加(2007年为75.6%;2004年为48.9%)(患病率比1.55,95%置信区间1.21 - 1.97)。在询问孕产史时,只有21.7%(与2004年相比无增加)会常规询问饮酒情况。
我们建议在儿科培训中应强调询问孕期饮酒情况。除非儿科医生在询问孕产史时询问饮酒情况以及诊断FAS的能力得到提高,否则FAS在澳大利亚仍将诊断不足,管理、早期干预和预防的机会也将被忽视。