Duncan Edward A S, Fitzpatrick David
Nursing, Midwifery & Allied Health Professions Research Unit, Scion House, University of Stirling FK9 4NF, Scotland, UK.
Clinical Research Paramedic (Scottish Ambulance Service), Nursing, Midwifery & Allied Health Professions Research Unit, Scion House, University of Stirling FK9 4NF, Scotland, UK.
BMC Emerg Med. 2016 Feb 18;16:13. doi: 10.1186/s12873-016-0078-1.
Hypoglycaemia is a common and potentially life threatening consequence of insulin and sulphonylurea treated Diabetes. Some severe hypoglycaemic events result in emergency ambulance attendance. Many of these patients are treated at home and do not require immediate transportation to an Emergency Department. However only 27-37 % of patients then follow up their care with a diabetes specialist. Consequently repeat severe hypoglycaemic events occur.
The intervention was implemented for 8 months, using a prospective cohort design with a historic control, in one Scottish Health Board in 2012. Data was collected using postal survey questionnaires to patients and ambulance clinicians, telephone survey follow-up questions to patients. Scottish Ambulance Service electronic records were linked with the SCI-Diabetes database of patient records to enable objective measurement of follow-up behaviour.
Ambulance clinicians' (n = 92) awareness of the intervention was high and both the prompt card and telephone call components of the intervention were delivered to most eligible patients. The intervention was perceived as highly acceptable to patients (n = 37), and very useful by both patients and ambulance clinicians. However, comparison of patient follow-up behaviours using linked-data (n = 205), suggest that the intervention was unsuccessful in improving rates of patients' following up their care.
This study shows that the intervention is implementable, highly acceptable to patients, and considered very useful by both patients and ambulance clinicians. However, preliminary evidence of effectiveness is not encouraging. The study's novel use of linking existing clinical data for outcome measurement exposed challenges in the feasibility of using this data for intervention development and evaluation. Future research should examine challenges to the successful testing and effectiveness of the intervention. Revisions are likely to be required, both to study design and the optimisation of the intervention's content and components.
低血糖是胰岛素和磺脲类药物治疗糖尿病常见且可能危及生命的后果。一些严重低血糖事件需要紧急救护车出诊。这些患者中有许多在家接受治疗,不需要立即送往急诊科。然而,只有27% - 37%的患者随后会接受糖尿病专科医生的后续治疗。因此,严重低血糖事件会再次发生。
2012年在苏格兰一个卫生委员会采用前瞻性队列设计并设置历史对照,对干预措施进行了8个月的实施。通过向患者和救护车临床医生邮寄调查问卷、对患者进行电话调查随访问题来收集数据。苏格兰救护车服务电子记录与患者记录的SCI - 糖尿病数据库相链接,以便客观测量随访行为。
救护车临床医生(n = 92)对该干预措施的知晓率很高,干预措施中的提示卡和电话通知部分都提供给了大多数符合条件的患者。患者(n = 37)认为该干预措施非常可接受,患者和救护车临床医生都认为非常有用。然而,使用关联数据(n = 205)对患者随访行为进行比较表明,该干预措施在提高患者后续治疗跟进率方面未取得成功。
本研究表明该干预措施是可实施的,患者高度可接受,患者和救护车临床医生都认为非常有用。然而,有效性的初步证据并不令人鼓舞。该研究创新性地使用现有临床数据进行结局测量,揭示了将这些数据用于干预措施开发和评估的可行性方面的挑战。未来的研究应审视该干预措施成功测试和有效性方面的挑战。可能需要对研究设计以及干预措施的内容和组成部分进行优化修订。