McDermott Lisa, Leydon Geraldine M, Halls Amy, Kelly Jo, Nagle Amanda, White Jennifer, Little Paul
Department of Primary Care and Public Health Sciences, King's College London, London, UK.
Department of Primary Care and Population Sciences, Faculty of Medicine, University of Southampton, Southampton, UK.
BMJ Open. 2017 Nov 26;7(11):e016903. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2017-016903.
To explore perceptions of illness, the decisions to consult and the acceptability of delayed antibiotic prescriptions and self-help treatments for respiratory tract infections (RTIs).
Qualitative semistructured interview study.
UK primary care.
20 adult patients who had been participating in the 'PIPS' (Pragmatic Ibuprofen Paracetamol and Steam) trial in the South of England.
Semistructured telephone interviews were conducted with participants to explore their experiences and views on various treatments for RTI.
Participants had concerns about symptoms that were not clinically serious and were mostly unaware of the natural history of RTIs, but were aware of the limitations of antibiotics and did not expect them with every consultation. Most viewed delayed prescriptions positively and had no strong preference over which technique is used to deliver the delayed antibiotic, but some patients received mixed messages, such as being told their infection was viral then being given an antibiotic, or were sceptical about the rationale. Participants disliked self-help treatments that involved taking medication and were particularly concerned about painkillers in combination. Steam inhalation was viewed as only moderately helpful for mild symptoms.
Delayed prescribing is acceptable no matter how the delay is operationalised, but explanation of the rationale is needed and care taken to minimise mixed messages about the severity of illnesses and causation by viruses or bacteria. Better access is needed to good natural history information, and the signs and symptoms requiring or not requiring general practitioner advice. Significant concerns about paracetamol, ibuprofen and steam inhalation are likely to need careful exploration in the consultation.
探讨对疾病的认知、咨询决定以及呼吸道感染(RTIs)延迟抗生素处方和自助治疗的可接受性。
定性半结构化访谈研究。
英国初级医疗保健。
20名成年患者,他们曾参与英格兰南部的“PIPS”(实用布洛芬、对乙酰氨基酚和蒸汽)试验。
对参与者进行半结构化电话访谈,以探讨他们对RTIs各种治疗方法的经历和看法。
参与者对临床上不严重的症状表示担忧,大多不了解RTIs的自然病程,但意识到抗生素的局限性,且每次咨询时并不期望都能拿到抗生素。大多数人对延迟处方持积极态度,对于采用何种技术提供延迟抗生素没有强烈偏好,但一些患者收到了相互矛盾的信息,比如被告知感染是病毒性的,随后却拿到了抗生素,或者对其中的原理表示怀疑。参与者不喜欢涉及服药的自助治疗方法,尤其担心止痛药的组合使用。吸入蒸汽对轻微症状的帮助被认为只是中等程度。
无论延迟如何实施,延迟开处方都是可以接受的,但需要对原理进行解释,并注意尽量减少关于疾病严重程度以及病毒或细菌致病方面的矛盾信息。需要更好地获取关于自然病程的信息,以及哪些体征和症状需要或不需要全科医生的建议。在咨询过程中,可能需要仔细探讨对乙酰氨基酚、布洛芬和吸入蒸汽的重大担忧。