Australian Research Centre in Complementary and Integrative Medicine, Faculty of Health, University of Technology Sydney, 235-253 Jones St, Ultimo, NSW, Australia ; Network of Researchers in the Public Health of Complementary and Alternative Medicine (NORPHCAM.
Chin Med. 2013 Apr 8;8:8. doi: 10.1186/1749-8546-8-8. eCollection 2013.
Chinese medicine practitioners (CMPs) play an important part in rural and regional Australian healthcare. A survey was conducted to investigate referral practices between Chinese medicine (CM) and conventional primary health care practitioners in this region.
A 27-item questionnaire was sent to all 1486 general practitioners (GPs) currently practising in rural and regional Divisions of General Practice in New South Wales, Australia. This survey explored GP opinions, perceptions and practices in relation to complementary and alternative medicine or Chinese medicine specifically.
A total of 585 GPs completed the questionnaire. Forty-nine were returned as 'no longer at this address', resulting in an adjusted response rate of 40.7%. One in ten GPs (9.9%) had referred their patients to CMPs at least a few times over the past 12 months, one in five GPs (17.4%) could not locate a CMP to refer to in their local area, and over one-third of GPs (37.7%) stated they would not refer to a CMP under any circumstances. GPs that had graduated from an Australian medical college (OR = 3.71; CI: 1.22, 11.23), GPs observing positive responses previously in patients using CM (OR = 2.53; 95% CI: 1.12, 8.58), GPs perceiving a lack of other options for patients (OR = 3.10; 95% CI: 1.12, 8.58), GPs reporting satisfactory or higher levels of CM knowledge (OR = 15.62; 95% CI: 5.47, 44.56), and GPs interested in increasing their complementary and alternative medicine knowledge (OR = 3.28; 95% CI: 1.17, 9.21) referred to CMPs more frequently than did other groups of GPs amongst the rural GPs included in this study.
There has been little interaction between CMPs and Australian rural and regional GPs.
中医师在澳大利亚农村和地区的医疗保健中发挥着重要作用。一项调查旨在研究该地区中医与常规初级保健从业者之间的转诊实践。
向澳大利亚新南威尔士州农村和地区全科医生分部的 1486 名全科医生发送了一份 27 项的调查问卷。该调查探讨了全科医生对补充和替代医学或中医的意见、看法和实践。
共有 585 名全科医生完成了问卷。49 份被退回为“地址不再有效”,调整后的回复率为 40.7%。十分之一的全科医生(9.9%)在过去 12 个月中至少几次将患者转介给中医师,五分之一的全科医生(17.4%)无法在当地找到可转介的中医师,超过三分之一的全科医生(37.7%)表示在任何情况下都不会转介给中医师。毕业于澳大利亚医学院的全科医生(OR=3.71;95%CI:1.22,11.23)、观察到患者使用中医治疗有积极反应的全科医生(OR=2.53;95%CI:1.12,8.58)、认为患者缺乏其他选择的全科医生(OR=3.10;95%CI:1.12,8.58)、报告对中医知识有满意或更高水平的全科医生(OR=15.62;95%CI:5.47,44.56)和对增加补充和替代医学知识感兴趣的全科医生(OR=3.28;95%CI:1.17,9.21)比本研究中包括的农村全科医生中的其他群体更频繁地转介中医师。
中医师与澳大利亚农村和地区的全科医生之间很少有互动。