Discipline of General Practice, National University of Ireland Galway, 1 Distillery Rd, Newcastle, Galway, Ireland.
BMC Fam Pract. 2011 Aug 31;12:93. doi: 10.1186/1471-2296-12-93.
New approaches are being sought to safely reduce community antibiotic prescribing. A recent study demonstrated that CRP testing resulted in decreased antibiotic prescribing for lower respiratory tract infection in primary care. There is little other published primary care data available evaluating CRP in the treatment of lower respiratory tract infections in routine clinical practice. This pilot study aims to describe the performance of near-patient CRP testing, in a mixed payments health system. Specific areas to be reviewed included the integrity of the study protocol, testing of data collection forma and acceptability of the intervention.
Patients over the age of 18 years, with acute cough and/or sore throat with a duration of one month or less, in routine clinical practice.
A pilot with a cross-sectional design. The first 60 recruited patients were treated with routine clinical management, and GP's had no access to a CRP test. For the subsequent 60 patients, access to CRP testing was available.
3 GP's in one Irish primary care practice recruited 120 patients, fulfilling the above criteria over five months, from January 1 to May 31, 2010.
The primary outcome was antibiotic prescription at the index consultation. Secondary outcomes were the numbers of delayed prescriptions issued, patient satisfaction immediately after consultation and re-consultations and antibiotic prescriptions during 28 days follow-up.
The protocol and data collection forms worked well and the intervention of CRP testing appeared acceptable. Thirty-five (58%) patients in the no-test group received antibiotic prescriptions compared to 27 (45%) in the test group. Both groups demonstrated similarly high level of patient satisfaction (85%). Fourteen (23%) patients in the CRP test group re-attended within 28 days compared to 9 (15%) in the no-CRP test group.
This pilot study confirms the potential feasibility of a full trial in Irish general practice. Further consideration of possible increased re-attendance rates in a mixed payments health system is appropriate. We intend to pursue a larger trial in a newly established regional primary care research network.
目前正在寻求新的方法来安全减少社区抗生素的使用。最近的一项研究表明,在初级保健中,C 反应蛋白(CRP)检测可降低下呼吸道感染的抗生素使用。在常规临床实践中,很少有其他已发表的关于 CRP 治疗下呼吸道感染的初级保健数据。本试点研究旨在描述混合支付医疗体系中床边 CRP 检测的性能。需要审查的具体领域包括研究方案的完整性、数据收集表格的测试和干预措施的可接受性。
18 岁以上,急性咳嗽和/或咽痛持续一个月或更短时间,处于常规临床实践中。
采用横断面设计的试点研究。前 60 名招募的患者接受常规临床管理,全科医生无法进行 CRP 检测。对于随后的 60 名患者,可以进行 CRP 检测。
爱尔兰一家初级保健实践中的 3 名全科医生在五个月内(2010 年 1 月 1 日至 5 月 31 日)共招募了 120 名符合上述标准的患者。
主要结局是指数咨询时的抗生素处方。次要结局为延迟处方数量、咨询后即刻患者满意度、再次就诊和 28 天随访期间的抗生素处方。
方案和数据收集表格运行良好,CRP 检测干预措施似乎可以接受。在无检测组中,35 名(58%)患者接受了抗生素处方,而在检测组中,27 名(45%)患者接受了抗生素处方。两组患者的满意度均较高(85%)。在 CRP 检测组中,有 14 名(23%)患者在 28 天内再次就诊,而在无 CRP 检测组中,有 9 名(15%)患者再次就诊。
本试点研究证实了在爱尔兰全科医生中进行全面试验的潜在可行性。在混合支付医疗体系中,进一步考虑可能增加的再次就诊率是合适的。我们打算在新成立的区域初级保健研究网络中进行更大规模的试验。