Nawaz Sameerah, Tapley Amanda, Davey Andrew R, van Driel Mieke L, Fielding Alison, Holliday Elizabeth G, Ball Jean, Patsan Irena, Berrigan Alyse, Morgan Simon, Spike Neil A, FitzGerald Kristen, Magin Parker
GP Synergy, Regional Training Organisation, Liverpool, NSW, Australia.
The University of Newcastle, School of Medicine and Public Health, Callaghan, NSW, Australia.
Dermatol Pract Concept. 2021 May 20;11(3):e2021055. doi: 10.5826/dpc.1103a55. eCollection 2021 May.
The management of psoriasis by general practitioners (GPs) is vital, given its prevalence, chronicity, and associated physical and psychosocial co-morbidities. However, there is little information on how GPs (including early-career GPs) manage psoriasis.
This study assessed the frequency with which Australian specialist GP vocational trainees ('registrars') provide psoriasis care and the associations of that clinical experience.
A cross-sectional analysis was done of data from the ReCEnT study, an ongoing multi-site cohort study of Australian GP registrars' experiences during vocational training. In ReCEnT, 60 consecutive consultations are recorded 3 times (6-monthly) during each registrar's training. The outcome factor for this analysis was a problem/diagnosis being psoriasis, and independent variables were related to registrar, patient, practice and consultation factors. This study analysed 17 rounds of data collection (2010-2017) using univariate and multivariable regression.
Data from 1,741 registrars regarding 241,888 consultations and 377,980 problems/diagnoses were analysed. Psoriasis comprised 0.15% (n=550) of all problems/diagnoses (95% CI, 0.13-0.16). Significant patient multivariable associations of a problem/diagnosis being psoriasis included age, gender, being new to a practice or a registrar, and psoriasis being an existing problem rather than a new diagnosis. Significant registrar associations included seeking in-consultation information/assistance, not scheduling a follow-up appointment, prescribing medication, and generating learning goals.
Australian registrars have modest training exposure to psoriasis and may find psoriasis management challenging. Furthermore, continuity of care (essential for optimal chronic disease management) was modest. The findings have implications for GPs' approaches to the management of psoriasis more widely as well for general practice education and training policies.
考虑到银屑病的患病率、慢性病程以及相关的身体和心理社会合并症,全科医生(GP)对银屑病的管理至关重要。然而,关于全科医生(包括初入职场的全科医生)如何管理银屑病的信息却很少。
本研究评估了澳大利亚专科全科医生职业培训学员(“注册医生”)提供银屑病护理的频率以及该临床经验的相关性。
对ReCEnT研究的数据进行横断面分析,ReCEnT是一项正在进行的多中心队列研究,旨在了解澳大利亚全科医生注册医生在职业培训期间的经历。在ReCEnT研究中,每位注册医生在培训期间每6个月记录3次连续60次会诊。本分析的结果因素是问题/诊断为银屑病,自变量与注册医生、患者、诊所和会诊因素有关。本研究使用单变量和多变量回归分析了17轮数据收集(2010 - 2017年)。
分析了1741名注册医生关于241,888次会诊和377,980个问题/诊断的数据。银屑病占所有问题/诊断的0.15%(n = 550)(95%可信区间,0.13 - 0.16)。问题/诊断为银屑病的显著患者多变量关联因素包括年龄、性别、是诊所或注册医生的新患者,以及银屑病是现有问题而非新诊断。显著的注册医生关联因素包括在会诊中寻求信息/协助、未安排随访预约、开药以及制定学习目标。
澳大利亚注册医生对银屑病的培训接触有限,可能会发现银屑病管理具有挑战性。此外,连续性护理(对优化慢性病管理至关重要)程度一般。这些发现对全科医生更广泛的银屑病管理方法以及全科医学教育和培训政策都有影响。