Department of General Practice, The University of Melbourne, Carlton, Victoria, Australia
Department of General Practice, The University of Melbourne, Carlton, Victoria, Australia.
BMJ Open. 2019 Aug 5;9(8):e028329. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2018-028329.
This study aimed to explore how general practitioners (GPs) access and use both guidelines and electronic medical records (EMRs) to assist in clinical decision-making when prescribing antibiotics in Australia.
This is an exploratory qualitative study with thematic analysis interpreted using the Theory of Planned Behaviour (TPB) framework.
This study was conducted in general practice in Victoria, Australia.
Twenty-six GPs from five general practices were recruited to participate in five focus groups between February and April 2018.
GPs expressed that current EMR systems do not provide clinical decision support to assist with antibiotic prescribing. Access and use of guidelines were variable. GPs who had more clinical experience were less likely to access guidelines than younger and less experienced GPs. Guideline use and guideline-concordant prescribing was facilitated if there was a practice culture encouraging evidence-based practice. However, a lack of access to guidelines and perceived patients' expectation and demand for antibiotics were barriers to guideline-concordant prescribing. Furthermore, guidelines that were easy to access and navigate, free, embedded within EMRs and fit into the clinical workflow were seen as likely to enhance guideline use.
Current barriers to the use of antibiotic guidelines include GPs' experience, patient factors, practice culture, and ease of access and cost of guidelines. To reduce inappropriate antibiotic prescribing and to promote more rational use of antibiotic in the community, guidelines should be made available, accessible and easy to use, with minimal cost to practicing GPs. Integration of evidence-based antibiotic guidelines within the EMR in the form of a clinical decision support tool could optimise guideline use and increase guideline-concordant prescribing.
本研究旨在探索澳大利亚全科医生(GP)在开具抗生素处方时,如何获取和使用指南和电子病历(EMR)来辅助临床决策。
这是一项探索性定性研究,使用计划行为理论(TPB)框架进行主题分析解释。
本研究在澳大利亚维多利亚州的全科医疗实践中进行。
2018 年 2 月至 4 月期间,从五家全科诊所招募了 26 名全科医生参加了五次焦点小组。
GP 们表示,目前的 EMR 系统并未提供临床决策支持来辅助抗生素处方。指南的获取和使用情况各不相同。相比年轻和经验较少的 GP,临床经验更丰富的 GP 不太可能查阅指南。如果有鼓励循证实践的实践文化,那么使用指南和遵循指南的开具处方的情况会得到改善。然而,获取指南的障碍以及认为患者期望和需求抗生素,是遵循指南开具处方的障碍。此外,易于获取和导航、免费、嵌入 EMR 并与临床工作流程相契合的指南,被认为更有可能促进指南的使用。
目前阻碍抗生素指南使用的因素包括 GP 的经验、患者因素、实践文化以及指南的获取和成本。为了减少不适当的抗生素处方,促进社区中抗生素的更合理使用,应提供、获取和使用方便、成本低廉的指南。以临床决策支持工具的形式将基于证据的抗生素指南整合到 EMR 中,可以优化指南的使用并增加遵循指南的开具处方。