Stillman Michael, Gustafson Kristin, Fried Guy W, Fried Karen, Williams Steve R
1Internal Medicine and Rehabilitation Medicine, Sidney Kimmel Medical College of Thomas Jefferson University, 1100 Walnut Street, Suite 601, Philadelphia, PA 19107 USA.
2Department of Rehabilitation Medicine, Sidney Kimmel Medical College of Thomas Jefferson University, Philadelphia, PA USA.
Spinal Cord Ser Cases. 2019 May 13;5:44. doi: 10.1038/s41394-019-0187-7. eCollection 2019.
An online questionnaire.
To gauge spinal cord injury (SCI) specialists' assessment of their communications with general practitioners (GPs). To determine whether economic or health-care system-related factors enhance or inhibit such communication.
A collaboration of co-authors from a health-care system.
An online survey interrogating a number of aspects of communication between SCI specialists and GPs was developed, distributed, and made available for 4 months. Responses were analyzed for the entire cohort then according to descriptions of participants' home nations' economies and the type of health-care delivery systems in which they work.
A total of 88 responses were submitted. The majority (64%) were from nations with developed economies, a plurality (47.1%) were from countries that offer universal health coverage, and half used a combination of paper and electronic health records. A majority of respondents (61.8%) reported routinely communicating with their patients' GPs, but most (53.4%) rated those communications as only "fair". The most commonly listed barriers to communication with GPs were lack of time (46.3%) and a perceived lack of receptivity by GPs (26.9%). Nearly all respondents (91.6%) believed that the care they provide would be enhanced by improved communication with GPs. Participants who used electronic means of communication were more likely to communicate with GPs and to describe those interactions as "positive".
Although there are a number of barriers to communication between SCI specialists and GPs, most SCI specialists are eager for such inter-physician communication and believe it would enhance their care they deliver.
在线问卷调查。
评估脊髓损伤(SCI)专家对其与全科医生(GP)沟通情况的评价。确定经济或与医疗保健系统相关的因素是促进还是抑制这种沟通。
来自一个医疗保健系统的共同作者合作开展的研究。
设计了一份在线调查问卷,询问SCI专家与全科医生沟通的多个方面,进行分发,并开放4个月以供填写。首先对整个队列的回复进行分析,然后根据参与者母国经济状况的描述以及他们所在的医疗保健提供系统类型进行分析。
共提交了88份回复。大多数(64%)来自发达经济体国家,多数(47.1%)来自提供全民医保的国家,一半使用纸质和电子健康记录相结合的方式。大多数受访者(61.8%)报告称经常与患者的全科医生沟通,但大多数(53.4%)认为这些沟通仅为“一般”。与全科医生沟通最常列出的障碍是时间不足(46.3%)和认为全科医生缺乏接受度(26.9%)。几乎所有受访者(91.6%)都认为改善与全科医生的沟通会提高他们提供的护理质量。使用电子通信方式的参与者更有可能与全科医生沟通,并将这些互动描述为“积极”。
尽管SCI专家与全科医生之间的沟通存在诸多障碍,但大多数SCI专家渴望这种医生间的沟通,并认为这会提高他们提供的护理质量。