Alweis Richard, Greco Michael, Wasser Thomas, Wenderoth Suzanne
Department of Medicine, The Reading Hospital and Medical Center, West Reading, PA, USA ; Department of Medicine, Jefferson Medical College, Philadelphia, PA, USA.
Saint Joseph's University, Philadelphia, PA, USA.
J Community Hosp Intern Med Perspect. 2014 Feb 17;4(1). doi: 10.3402/jchimp.v4.22958. eCollection 2014.
Upper respiratory infections, acute sinus infections, and sore throats are common symptoms that cause patients to seek medical care. Despite well-established treatment guidelines, studies indicate that antibiotics are prescribed far more frequently than appropriate, raising a multitude of clinical issues.
The primary goal of this study was to increase guideline adherence rates for acute sinusitis, pharyngitis, and upper respiratory tract infections (URIs). This study was the first Plan-Do-Study-Act (PDSA) cycle in a quality improvement program at an internal medicine resident faculty practice at a university-affiliated community hospital internal medicine residency program. To improve guideline adherence for respiratory infections, a package of small-scale interventions was implemented aimed at improving patient and provider education regarding viral and bacterial infections and the necessity for antibiotics. The data from this study was compared with a previously published study in this practice, which evaluated the adherence rates for the treatment guidelines before the changes, to determine effectiveness of the modifications. After the first PDSA cycle, providers were surveyed to determine barriers to adherence to antibiotic prescribing guidelines.
After the interventions, antibiotic guideline adherence for URI improved from a rate of 79.28 to 88.58% with a p-value of 0.004. The increase of adherence rates for sinusitis and pharyngitis were 41.7-57.58% (p=0.086) and 24.0-25.0% (p=0.918), respectively. The overall change in guideline adherence for the three conditions increased from 57.2 to 78.6% with the implementations (p<0.001). In planning for future PDSA cycles, a fishbone diagram was constructed in order to identify all perceived facets of the problem of non-adherence to the treatment guidelines for URIs, sinusitis, and pharyngitis. From the fishbone diagram and the provider survey, several potential directions for future work are discussed.
Passive interventions can result in small changes in antibiotic guideline adherence, but further PDSA cycles using more active methodologies are needed.
上呼吸道感染、急性鼻窦感染和喉咙痛是导致患者寻求医疗护理的常见症状。尽管有既定的治疗指南,但研究表明抗生素的处方频率远远超过合理范围,引发了众多临床问题。
本研究的主要目标是提高急性鼻窦炎、咽炎和上呼吸道感染(URI)的指南依从率。本研究是一所大学附属医院内科住院医师培训项目中内科住院医师教员诊所质量改进计划的首个计划-实施-研究-改进(PDSA)循环。为提高呼吸道感染的指南依从性,实施了一系列小规模干预措施,旨在改善患者和医疗服务提供者对病毒和细菌感染以及抗生素必要性的教育。将本研究的数据与该诊所之前发表的一项研究进行比较,该研究评估了变革前治疗指南的依从率,以确定这些修改的有效性。在第一个PDSA循环之后,对医疗服务提供者进行了调查,以确定遵守抗生素处方指南的障碍。
干预后,URI的抗生素指南依从率从79.28%提高到88.58%,p值为0.004。鼻窦炎和咽炎的依从率分别提高了41.7 - 57.58%(p = 0.086)和24.0 - 25.0%(p = 0.918)。这三种疾病的指南总体依从率从57.2%提高到78.6%(p < 0.001)。在规划未来的PDSA循环时,构建了鱼骨图,以识别所有被认为与不遵守URI、鼻窦炎和咽炎治疗指南问题相关的方面。根据鱼骨图和医疗服务提供者的调查,讨论了未来工作的几个潜在方向。
被动干预可导致抗生素指南依从性有小幅度变化,但需要使用更积极方法的进一步PDSA循环。