Kane Bryan G, Guillaume Alexander W D, Evans Elizabeth M, Goyke Terrence E, Eygnor Jessica K, Semler Lauren, Dusza Stephen W, Greenberg Marna Rayl
Lehigh Valley Hospital and Health Network/USF MCOM CC & I-78, Department of Emergency Medicine, Allentown, Pennsylvania.
West J Emerg Med. 2017 Apr;18(3):390-397. doi: 10.5811/westjem.2016.12.32440. Epub 2017 Mar 8.
Sexually transmitted infections (STIs) are a common reason for emergency department (ED) visits. The objective of this study was to determine if there were gender differences in adherence to Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) STI diagnosis and treatment guidelines, as documented by emergency providers.
We performed a retrospective chart review to identify patients treated for urethritis, cervicitis, and pelvic inflammatory disease (PID) in the EDs of three hospitals in a Pennsylvania network during a calendar year. Cases were reviewed to assess for compliance with CDC guidelines. We used descriptive statistics to assess the distributions of study variables by patient sex. In the analysis we used Student's t-tests, chi-square tests, and logistic regression. Statistical significance was set at p ≤ 0.05.
We identified 286 patient records. Of these, we excluded 39 for the following reasons: incorrect disease coding; the patient was admitted and treated as an inpatient for his/her disease; or the patient left the ED after refusing care. Of the 247 participants, 159 (64.4%) were female. Females were significantly younger (26.6 years, SD=8.0) than males (31.2, SD=11.5%), (95% confidence interval [CI] [2.0- 7.0], p=0.0003). All of the males (n=88) in the cohort presented with urethritis; 25.8% of females presented with cervicitis, and 74.2% with PID. Physician compliance for the five CDC criteria ranged from 68.8% for patient history to 93.5% for patient diagnostic testing, including urine pregnancy and gonorrhea/chlamydia cultures. We observed significant differences by patient sex. Fifty-four percent of the charts had symptoms recorded for female patients that were consistent with CDC characteristics for diagnostic criteria compared to over 95% for males, OR=16.9; 95% CI [5.9-48.4], p<0.001. Similar results were observed for patient discharge instructions, with physicians completely documenting delivery of discharge instructions to 51.6% of females compared to 97.7% of complete documentation in males, OR=42.3; 95% CI [10.0-178.6] p<0.001). We observed no significant sex differences in physician documentation for physical exam or for therapeutic antibiotic treatment.
This retrospective study found patient gender differences in how emergency providers complied with documenting with regard to the 2010 CDC guidelines for the diagnosis and treatment of urethritis, cervicitis, and PID. Specifically medical records of men were more likely to have complete documentation of symptoms recorded (95% CI 5.9-48.4) and to have discharge instruction documentation (95% CI 10.0-178.6) than records of women.
性传播感染(STIs)是急诊科(ED)就诊的常见原因。本研究的目的是确定急诊医护人员记录的病例中,在遵循美国疾病控制与预防中心(CDC)性传播感染诊断和治疗指南方面是否存在性别差异。
我们进行了一项回顾性病历审查,以确定宾夕法尼亚州一个医疗网络中三家医院急诊科在一个日历年中接受尿道炎、宫颈炎和盆腔炎(PID)治疗的患者。审查病例以评估是否符合CDC指南。我们使用描述性统计来评估按患者性别划分的研究变量分布。在分析中,我们使用了学生t检验、卡方检验和逻辑回归。统计学显著性设定为p≤0.05。
我们识别出286份患者记录。其中,我们因以下原因排除了39份记录:疾病编码错误;患者因疾病被收治为住院患者;或患者拒绝治疗后离开急诊科。在247名参与者中,159名(64.4%)为女性。女性明显比男性年轻(26.6岁,标准差=8.0)(男性为31.2岁,标准差=11.5%),(95%置信区间[CI][2.0 - 7.0],p = 0.0003)。队列中的所有男性(n = 88)均表现为尿道炎;25.8%的女性表现为宫颈炎,74.2%表现为盆腔炎。医生对CDC的五项标准的依从性范围从患者病史的68.8%到患者诊断测试(包括尿妊娠和淋病/衣原体培养)的93.5%。我们观察到患者性别存在显著差异。与男性超过95%的病历相比,女性患者病历中记录的符合CDC诊断标准特征的症状为54%,OR = 16.9;95% CI [5.9 - 48.4],p < 0.001。在患者出院指导方面也观察到类似结果,医生向51.6%的女性完整记录了出院指导,而男性的完整记录率为97.7%,OR = 42.3;95% CI [10.0 - 178.6],p < 0.001)。我们在医生对体格检查或治疗性抗生素治疗的记录中未观察到显著的性别差异。
这项回顾性研究发现,在急诊医护人员遵循2010年CDC尿道炎、宫颈炎和盆腔炎诊断与治疗指南的记录方面存在患者性别差异。具体而言,男性的病历比女性的病历更有可能完整记录症状(95% CI 5.9 - 48.4)和出院指导记录(95% CI 10.0 - 178.6)。