The Carman and Ann Adams, Department of Pediatrics, Children's Hospital of Michigan, Wayne State University, Detroit, USA.
Allergy Asthma Proc. 2011 Jul-Aug;32(4):307-12. doi: 10.2500/aap.2011.32.3445.
"Expert Panel Report 3 (EPR-3): Guidelines for the Diagnosis and Management of Asthma" includes guidelines for referral to an asthma specialist. Because most cases of asthma are managed by primary care physicians, we intended to explore the referral practices of pediatricians managing childhood asthma. This study was designed to identify important considerations by pediatricians while referring a child to an asthma specialist. An electronic survey was sent to 1200 graduated pediatricians enlisted in the Michigan Chapter, American Academy of Pediatrics directory. The questions explored asthma disease characteristics, physician preferences when referring children with asthma, and reasons and barriers for asthma consultations. All responses were collected anonymously. We received 240/1200 (20%) questionnaires. The majority of pediatricians considered referral to a specialist if a child had severe persistent asthma (201/236 [85.2%]) or had a single life-threatening asthma event (188/229 [82.1%]). The top two likely reasons of referral included poor asthma control (200/224 [89.3%]) and unclear diagnosis (139/224 [62.1%]). We found 74/219 (33.8%) preferred consultation to a pediatric pulmonologist when compared with 93/219 (42.5%) allergists. We found the minority of pediatricians "always" recommended referral to a specialist for the following reasons: allergy skin testing (30/222 [13.5%]), possible allergen immunotherapy (54/223 [24.2%]), and spirometry (26/221 [11.8%]). The major barrier for childhood asthma specialist consultations was issues with medical insurance coverage (137/205 [66.8%]). Allergists have to educate primary care providers about the importance of allergen control, role of allergen immunotherapy, and updating current asthma treatment guidelines when treating a child with allergic asthma.
“专家小组报告 3(EPR-3):哮喘诊断和管理指南”包括向哮喘专家转诊的指南。由于大多数哮喘病例由初级保健医生管理,我们旨在探讨管理儿童哮喘的儿科医生的转诊实践。这项研究旨在确定儿科医生在将儿童转介给哮喘专家时需要考虑的重要因素。我们向密歇根州美国儿科学会分会目录中列出的 1200 名毕业儿科医生发送了一份电子调查。这些问题探讨了哮喘疾病特征、医生在为哮喘儿童转诊时的偏好,以及哮喘咨询的原因和障碍。所有回复均匿名收集。我们收到了 1200 份问卷中的 240 份(20%)。如果儿童患有严重持续性哮喘(201/236[85.2%])或有单次危及生命的哮喘发作(188/229[82.1%]),大多数儿科医生会考虑转介给专家。转诊的前两个主要原因包括哮喘控制不佳(200/224[89.3%])和诊断不明确(139/224[62.1%])。与 93/219(42.5%)过敏症专家相比,我们发现 74/219(33.8%)更喜欢向儿科肺科医生咨询。我们发现少数儿科医生“总是”建议向专家转诊,原因如下:过敏皮肤测试(30/222[13.5%])、可能的过敏原免疫治疗(54/223[24.2%])和肺活量测定(26/221[11.8%])。儿童哮喘专家咨询的主要障碍是医疗保险覆盖问题(137/205[66.8%])。过敏症专家在治疗过敏性哮喘儿童时,必须向初级保健提供者传授过敏原控制的重要性、过敏原免疫治疗的作用以及更新当前哮喘治疗指南。