Anderson Emma C, Ingle Suzanne, Muir Peter, Beck Charles R, Leeming John P, Kesten Joanna, Cabral Christie, Hay Alastair D
1Centre for Academic Child Health, Population Health Sciences (PHS), Bristol Medical School (BRMS), University of Bristol, 1-5 Whiteladies Road, Bristol, BS8 1NU UK.
2NIHR Health Protection Research Unit in Evaluation of Interventions (HPRU) and Centre for Academic Primary Care (CAPC), PHS, BRMS, University of Bristol, Canynge Hall, 39 Whatley Road, Bristol, BS8 2PS UK.
Pilot Feasibility Stud. 2018 Dec 10;4:182. doi: 10.1186/s40814-018-0371-8. eCollection 2018.
There is a need to reduce unnecessary general practitioner (GP) consultations and improve antibiotic stewardship in primary care. Respiratory tract infections (RTIs) in children are the most common reason for consulting and prescribing. Most RTI research is conducted at the point of consultation, leaving a knowledge gap regarding the population burden of RTIs.
Community-based, online prospective inception cohort study with nested qualitative study, to evaluate the feasibility and acceptability of collecting RTI symptom and microbiological data from children recruited prior to RTI onset.
Parents of 10,310 children were invited. Three hundred thirty-one parents of 485 (4.7%) children responded and completed baseline data. Respondents were less socioeconomically deprived ( < 0.001) with younger (median ages 4 vs. 6 years, < 0.001) children than non-respondents. The same parents reported 346 RTI episodes in 259 children, and 305 RTIs (in 225 children) were retained to parent-reported symptom resolution. Restricting analyses to the first RTI episode per family (to account for clustering effects), parents fully completed symptom diaries for 180 (87%) of 192 first illness episodes. Research nurses conducted home visits for 199 RTI episodes, collecting complete (symptomatic) swab sets in 195 (98%). Parents collected 194 (98% of 199 possible) symptomatic (during the nurse visit) and 282 (92% of 305 possible) asymptomatic swab sets (on symptom resolution, no nurse present). Interviews with 30 mothers and 11 children indicated study acceptability.
Invitation response rates were in the expected range. The high retention and qualitative evidence suggest that community-based paediatric syndromic and microbiological surveillance research is feasible.
有必要减少不必要的全科医生(GP)会诊,并改善初级医疗保健中的抗生素管理。儿童呼吸道感染(RTIs)是就诊和开处方的最常见原因。大多数RTI研究是在会诊时进行的,关于RTIs的人群负担存在知识空白。
基于社区的在线前瞻性队列研究,并嵌套定性研究,以评估从RTI发作前招募的儿童中收集RTI症状和微生物学数据的可行性和可接受性。
邀请了10310名儿童的家长。485名(4.7%)儿童的331名家长做出回应并完成了基线数据。与未回应者相比,回应者的社会经济剥夺程度较低(<0.001),孩子年龄较小(中位年龄4岁对6岁,<0.001)。这些家长报告了259名儿童中的346次RTI发作,其中305次RTI(225名儿童)持续到家长报告症状缓解。将分析限制在每个家庭的首次RTI发作(以考虑聚类效应),家长为192次首次发病中的180次(87%)完整填写了症状日记。研究护士对199次RTI发作进行了家访,在195次(98%)中收集到了完整(有症状)的拭子样本。家长在护士家访期间收集了194次(199次可能中的98%)有症状的样本,在症状缓解且无护士在场时收集了282次(305次可能中的92%)无症状拭子样本。对30名母亲和11名儿童的访谈表明该研究具有可接受性。
邀请回应率在预期范围内。高保留率和定性证据表明基于社区的儿科综合征和微生物学监测研究是可行的。