Pearson William S, Gift Thomas L, Leichliter Jami S, Jenkins Wiley D
Division of STD Prevention, National Center for HIV, STD, and TB Prevention, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, GA, USA.
Southern Illinois University School of Medicine, Springfield, IL, USA.
J Community Health. 2015 Dec;40(6):1115-21. doi: 10.1007/s10900-015-0037-x.
Chlamydia trachomatis (CT) is the most commonly reported sexually transmitted infection (STI) in the US and timely, correct treatment can reduce CT transmission and sequelae. Emergency departments (ED) are an important location for diagnosing STIs. This study compared recommended treatment of CT in EDs to treatment in physician offices. Five years of data (2006-2010) were analyzed from the National Ambulatory Medical Care Survey, and the National Hospital Ambulatory Medical Care Surveys (NHAMCS), including the Outpatient survey (NHAMCS-OPD) and Emergency Department survey (NHAMCS-ED). All visits with a CT diagnosis and those with a diagnosis of unspecified venereal disease were selected for analysis. Differences in receipt of recommended treatments were compared between visits to physician offices and emergency departments using Chi square tests and logistic regression models. During the 5 year period, approximately 3.2 million ambulatory care visits had diagnosed CT or an unspecified venereal disease. A greater proportion of visits to EDs received the recommended treatment for CT compared to visits to physician offices (66.1 vs. 44.9 %, p < .01). When controlling for patients' age, sex and race/ethnicity, those presenting to the ED with CT were more likely to receive the recommended antibiotic treatment than patients presenting to a physician's office (OR 2.16; 95 % CI 1.04-4.48). This effect was attenuated when further controlling for patients' expected source of payment. These analyses demonstrate differences in the treatment of CT by ambulatory care setting as well as opportunities for increasing use of recommended treatments for diagnosed cases of this important STI.
沙眼衣原体(CT)是美国报告最多的性传播感染(STI),及时、正确的治疗可减少CT传播及其后遗症。急诊科(ED)是诊断性传播感染的重要场所。本研究比较了急诊科对CT的推荐治疗与医生办公室的治疗情况。分析了来自国家门诊医疗护理调查以及国家医院门诊医疗护理调查(NHAMCS)的五年数据(2006 - 2010年),包括门诊调查(NHAMCS - OPD)和急诊科调查(NHAMCS - ED)。所有诊断为CT以及诊断为未明确的性病的就诊病例均被选作分析对象。使用卡方检验和逻辑回归模型比较了在医生办公室就诊和在急诊科就诊时接受推荐治疗情况的差异。在这5年期间,约有320万门诊护理就诊病例被诊断为CT或未明确的性病。与在医生办公室就诊相比,在急诊科就诊的患者中接受CT推荐治疗的比例更高(66.1%对44.9%,p <.01)。在控制患者的年龄、性别和种族/民族后,因CT到急诊科就诊的患者比到医生办公室就诊的患者更有可能接受推荐的抗生素治疗(比值比2.16;95%置信区间1.04 - 4.48)。在进一步控制患者预期支付来源后,这种效应减弱。这些分析表明了门诊护理环境中CT治疗的差异,以及增加对这种重要性传播感染确诊病例使用推荐治疗的机会。