Department of Pediatrics, Division of Clinical Pharmacology and Therapeutics, The Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, 3501 Civic Center Blvd, Philadelphia, PA 19104, USA.
BMC Pediatr. 2011 Apr 2;11:25. doi: 10.1186/1471-2431-11-25.
Physicians, nurses and hospital pharmacists were surveyed to assess attitudes of hospital-based pediatric caregivers regarding the dosing of medicine to children. Our objectives were to gauge how current resources are utilized to guide the management of pediatric pharmacotherapy, assess drugs and drug classes where guidance is most critical and examine the prevalence and practice of dose adjustment in pediatric patients.
Questionnaire categories included demographics, pharmacotherapy resources, dosing adjustment and modification, and valuation of additional tools to provide improved pharmacotherapy guidance. The questionnaire was developed in collaboration with representative nurse, pharmacist and physician team members using the SurveyMonkey.com site and survey tool. The survey link was distributed to caregivers via email. The questionnaire results of 303 respondents were collected into MS Excel and imported into SAS for data summarization.
A total of 313 responses were obtained. Physician and nurse practitioner groups comprised the majority of the responses. Approximately 80% of the responders considered dosing adjustment important in pediatric pharmacotherapy. While there was general satisfaction with available resources, nearly 75% responded in support of access to predictive tools that facilitate individualized patient pharmacotherapy. The majority of respondents (> 65%) indicated that dosing outside standard practice occurs in 1-20% of their patients, while still a substantial number of respondents (a range of 8 to 20% reflecting the resident and fellow categories) estimated between 20 and 50% of their patients required adjustments outside the standard practice.
Differences in prescribing habits based on caregiver role, specialty and location were small and likely require further exploration. Existing resources are generally viewed as helpful but inadequate to guide recommendations for individual patients. Decision support systems connected to hospital-based electronic medical records offer the promise of informative and individualized pharmacotherapy guidance.
调查了医生、护士和医院药剂师,以评估基于医院的儿科护理人员对儿童用药剂量的态度。我们的目的是衡量当前资源如何用于指导儿科药物治疗管理,评估最需要指导的药物和药物类别,并检查儿科患者剂量调整的普遍性和实践情况。
问卷类别包括人口统计学、药物治疗资源、剂量调整和修改,以及评估提供改进药物治疗指导的其他工具的流行程度和实践情况。该问卷是由代表护士、药剂师和医生的团队成员在 SurveyMonkey.com 网站和调查工具上合作开发的。通过电子邮件将调查问卷链接分发给护理人员。共收到 303 名受访者的问卷结果,将其汇总到 MS Excel 中,并导入到 SAS 中进行数据汇总。
共收到 313 份回复。医生和护士从业者群体构成了回复的大部分。大约 80%的应答者认为剂量调整在儿科药物治疗中很重要。尽管对现有资源普遍满意,但近 75%的人表示支持获得有助于个体化患者药物治疗的预测工具。大多数受访者(>65%)表示,在他们的患者中,1-20%的患者存在剂量超出标准的情况,而仍有相当数量的受访者(反映住院医生和研究员类别的范围为 8-20%)估计他们的患者中有 20-50%需要超出标准实践的调整。
基于护理人员角色、专业和地点的处方习惯差异很小,可能需要进一步探讨。现有资源普遍被认为是有帮助的,但不足以指导针对个别患者的建议。与医院电子病历连接的决策支持系统有望提供信息丰富和个性化的药物治疗指导。