de Lusignan Simon, Hinton William, Konstantara Emmanouela, Munro Neil, Whyte Martin, Mount Julie, Feher Michael
Department of Clinical and Experimental Medicine, University of Surrey, The Leggett Building, Daphne Jackson Rd, Guildford, GU2 7XP, UK.
Research and Surveillance Centre (RSC), Royal College of Practitioners (RCGP), 30 Euston Square, London, NW1 2FN, UK.
BMC Health Serv Res. 2019 May 3;19(1):284. doi: 10.1186/s12913-019-4112-3.
In the UK, type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2D) is largely managed in primary care. Delay in the intensification to injectable therapy, a form of clinical inertia, is associated with worse glycaemic control. UK general practice is highly computerised, with care being recorded on computerised medical record systems; this allows for quantitative analysis of clinical care but not of the underpinning decision-making process. The aim of this study is to investigate perceptions of patients and clinicians in primary care on the initiation of injectable therapies in T2D, and the context within which those decisions are made.
This is a mixed methods study, taking a "realist evaluation" approach. The qualitative components comprise focus groups, interviews, and video recordings of simulated surgeries; the quantitative analysis: an overview of participating practices, elements of the video recording, and an online survey. We will recruit primary care clinicians (general practitioners and nurses) and patients from a representative sample of practices within the Royal College of General Practitioners (RCGP) Research and Surveillance Centre (RSC) network. Participants will be patients with T2D, and primary care clinicians. Focus groups and semi-structured interviews will be recorded, transcribed verbatim and analysed using Framework Analysis. The simulated surgeries will include cases that might be escalated to injectable therapy. The consultation will be reviewed using the Calgary-Cambridge model to assess communication and determination of adherence to national prescribing guidelines. We will conduct multi-channel video recording including screen capture, clinician and patient facial expressions, wide angle view of the consultation, and the computerised medical record screen. This allows annotation and qualitative analysis of the video recordings, and statistical analyses for the quantitative data. We will also conduct an online survey of primary care clinicians' attitudes to, and perceptions of, initiation of injectable therapies, which will be analysed using summary statistics.
Results aim to provide a detailed insight into the dynamic two-way decision-making process underpinning use of injectable therapy for T2D. The study will provide insights into clinical practice and enable the development of training, interventions and guidelines that may facilitate, where appropriate, the intensification to injectable therapy.
在英国,2型糖尿病(T2D)主要在初级医疗保健机构进行管理。强化治疗延迟至注射治疗(一种临床惰性形式)与血糖控制不佳相关。英国的全科医疗高度电子化,医疗护理记录在电子病历系统中;这便于对临床护理进行定量分析,但无法对基础决策过程进行分析。本研究的目的是调查初级医疗保健机构中患者和临床医生对T2D患者开始注射治疗的看法,以及做出这些决策的背景情况。
这是一项采用“现实主义评价”方法的混合方法研究。定性部分包括焦点小组讨论、访谈以及模拟诊疗的视频记录;定量分析包括参与诊疗机构的概述、视频记录的要素以及在线调查。我们将从皇家全科医师学院(RCGP)研究与监测中心(RSC)网络中有代表性的诊疗机构样本中招募初级医疗保健临床医生(全科医生和护士)和患者。参与者将是T2D患者和初级医疗保健临床医生。焦点小组讨论和半结构化访谈将进行记录、逐字转录,并使用框架分析法进行分析。模拟诊疗将包括可能升级为注射治疗的病例。将使用卡尔加里 - 剑桥模型对诊疗过程进行评估,以评估沟通情况以及对国家处方指南的遵循情况。我们将进行多通道视频记录,包括屏幕截图、临床医生和患者的面部表情、诊疗的广角视图以及电子病历屏幕。这便于对视频记录进行注释和定性分析,并对定量数据进行统计分析。我们还将对初级医疗保健临床医生对开始注射治疗的态度和看法进行在线调查,并使用汇总统计数据进行分析。
研究结果旨在深入详细了解T2D注射治疗基础上动态的双向决策过程。该研究将深入了解临床实践,并有助于制定培训、干预措施和指南,在适当情况下促进强化至注射治疗。