Chira Peter, Ronis Tova, Ardoin Stacy, White Patience
From the Department of Pediatrics, Section of Pediatric Rheumatology, Indiana University School of Medicine, Indianapolis, Indiana; Department of Pediatrics, Pediatric Rheumatology Division, George Washington University School of Medicine, Washington, DC; Departments of Medicine and Pediatrics, Adult and Pediatric Rheumatology, Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio; Joint Health and Autoimmune Diseases, George Washington University School of Medicine and Health Sciences and the Arthritis Foundation, Washington, DC, USA.
J Rheumatol. 2014 Apr;41(4):768-79. doi: 10.3899/jrheum.130615. Epub 2014 Mar 1.
To assess North American pediatric rheumatology providers' perspectives on practices, barriers, and opportunities concerning the transition from pediatric-centered to adult-centered care.
Childhood Arthritis and Rheumatology Research Alliance (CARRA) members completed a 25-item survey assessing current transition practices, transition policy awareness, and transitional care barriers and needs. Results were compared to the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) 2008 survey on transitional care.
Over half (158/288, 55%) of CARRA members completed the survey. Fewer than 10% are very familiar with AAP guidelines about transition care for youth with special healthcare needs. Eight percent have a formal written transition policy, but 42% use an informal approach. Patient request (75%) most frequently initiates transfer to adult care. Two major barriers to transition are fragmented adult medical care and lack of sufficient time to provide services. Compared with AAP survey participants, pediatric rheumatology providers are significantly more likely to help youth find an adult specialist (63% vs 45%) and discuss confidentiality and consent before age 18 (45% vs 33%), but are less likely to help with medical summary creation (16% vs 27%) or find a primary care provider (25% vs 47%). Outcomes ranked as "very important" in defining a successful transition are survival (76%), seeing an adult rheumatologist within 6 months of final pediatric rheumatology visit (66%), and maintaining insurance coverage (57%).
This comprehensive survey of North American pediatric rheumatology providers regarding transitional care practices demonstrates deficiencies in education, resources, and a formalized process. Respondents support development of standardized rheumatology-specific transition practices.
评估北美儿科风湿病医疗服务提供者对于从以儿科为中心的护理向以成人为中心的护理过渡的实践、障碍和机遇的看法。
儿童关节炎与风湿病研究联盟(CARRA)成员完成了一项包含25个项目的调查,评估当前的过渡实践、过渡政策知晓情况以及过渡护理的障碍和需求。将结果与美国儿科学会(AAP)2008年关于过渡护理的调查进行比较。
超过一半(158/288,55%)的CARRA成员完成了调查。不到10%的成员非常熟悉AAP关于有特殊医疗需求青少年过渡护理的指南。8%的成员有正式的书面过渡政策,但42%采用非正式方法。患者请求(75%)最常引发向成人护理的转诊。过渡的两个主要障碍是成人医疗护理碎片化以及缺乏提供服务的足够时间。与AAP调查参与者相比,儿科风湿病医疗服务提供者显著更有可能帮助青少年找到成人专科医生(63%对45%)以及在18岁之前讨论保密和同意问题(45%对33%),但在协助创建医疗总结(16%对27%)或寻找初级保健提供者方面的可能性较小(25%对47%)。在定义成功过渡时被评为“非常重要”的结果包括生存(76%)、在儿科风湿病最后一次就诊后6个月内见到成人风湿病医生(66%)以及维持保险覆盖(57%)。
这项针对北美儿科风湿病医疗服务提供者关于过渡护理实践的全面调查表明在教育、资源和正式流程方面存在不足。受访者支持制定标准化的风湿病特定过渡实践。