Department of Midwifery Science, AVAG, Groningen, and the EMGO Institute for Health and Care Research, VU University Medical Center, Amsterdam, 9713 GL, The Netherlands.
BMC Fam Pract. 2013 Jan 16;14:10. doi: 10.1186/1471-2296-14-10.
Midwives and obstetricians are the key providers of care during pregnancy and postpartum. Information about the consultations with a general practitioner (GP) during this period is generally lacking.The aim of this study is to compare consultation rates, diagnoses and GP management of pregnant women with those of non-pregnant women.
Data were retrieved from the Netherlands Information Network of General Practice (LINH), a nationally representative register. This register holds longitudinal data on consultations, prescriptions and the referrals of all patients listed at 84 practices in the Netherlands in 2007-2009, including 15,123 pregnant women and 102,564 non-pregnant women in the same age-range (15 to 45 years). We compared consultation rates (including all contacts with the practice), diagnoses (ICPC-1 coded), medication prescriptions (coded according to the Anatomical Therapeutic Chemical classification system), and rate and type of referrals from the start of the pregnancy until six weeks postpartum (336 days).
Pregnant women contacted their GP on average 3.6 times, compared to 2.2 times for non-pregnant women. The most frequently recorded diagnoses for pregnant women were 'pregnancy' and 'cystitis/urinary infection', and 'cystitis/urinary infection' and 'general disease not otherwise specified' for non-pregnant women. The mean number of prescribed medications was lower in pregnant women (2.1 against 4.4). For pregnant women, the most frequent referral indication concerned obstetric care, for non-pregnant women this concerned physiotherapy.
GP consultation rates in pregnancy and postpartum shows that GPs are important providers of care for pregnant women. Therefore, the involvement of GPs in collaborative care during pregnancy and postpartum should be reinforced.
助产士和产科医生是妊娠和产后护理的主要提供者。在此期间,一般医生(GP)就诊的信息通常缺乏。本研究的目的是比较孕妇与非孕妇的就诊率、诊断和 GP 管理。
数据来自荷兰综合医疗信息网络(LINH),这是一个具有全国代表性的登记处。该登记处保存了 2007 年至 2009 年荷兰 84 家诊所所有患者的咨询、处方和转诊的纵向数据,包括 15123 名孕妇和年龄在 15 至 45 岁的 102564 名非孕妇。我们比较了从妊娠开始到产后 6 周(336 天)的就诊率(包括与实践的所有接触)、诊断(ICPC-1 编码)、药物处方(根据解剖治疗化学分类系统编码)以及转诊率和类型。
孕妇平均就诊 3.6 次,而非孕妇就诊 2.2 次。孕妇最常记录的诊断是“妊娠”和“膀胱炎/尿路感染”,而非孕妇最常记录的诊断是“膀胱炎/尿路感染”和“未特指的一般性疾病”。孕妇开的处方药物数量平均较低(2.1 对 4.4)。对于孕妇来说,最常见的转诊指征是产科护理,而非孕妇则是物理治疗。
妊娠和产后的 GP 就诊率表明,GP 是孕妇护理的重要提供者。因此,应加强 GP 在妊娠和产后期间协作护理的参与。