Department of Ophthalmology and Visual Sciences, University of Kentucky College of Medicine, 110 Conn Terrace, Ste 550, Lexington, KY, 40508, USA.
Department of Pediatrics, University of Colorado School of Medicine, Aurora, CO, USA.
BMC Health Serv Res. 2022 Apr 14;22(1):507. doi: 10.1186/s12913-022-07915-5.
Diabetic retinopathy (DR) is a leading cause of blindness worldwide, despite easy detection and effective treatment. Annual screening rates in the USA remain low, especially for the disadvantaged, which telemedicine-based DR screening (TDRS) during routine primary care has been shown to improve. Screening rates from such programs have varied, however, pointing to inconsistent implementation and unaddressed barriers. This work seeks to identify and prioritize modifiable barriers for targeted intervention.
In this final phase of an exploratory mixed-methods study, we developed, validated, and administered a 62-item survey to multilevel stakeholders involved with TDRS in primary care safety-net clinics. Survey items were aligned with previously identified determinants of clinic-level screening and mapped to the Consolidated Framework for Implementation Research (CFIR). Classification and Regression Tree (CART) analyses were used to identify and rank independent variables predictive of individual-level TDRS screening performance.
Overall, 133 of the 341 invited professionals responded (39%), representing 20 safety-net clinics across 6 clinical systems. Respondents were predominately non-Hispanic White (77%), female (94%), and between 31 and 65 years of age (79%). Satisfaction with TDRS was high despite low self-reported screening rates. The most important screening determinants were: provider reinforcement of TDRS importance; explicit instructions by providers to staff; effective reminders; standing orders; high relative priority among routine diabetic measures; established TDRS workflows; performance feedback; effective TDRS champions; and leadership support.
In this survey of stakeholders involved with TDRS in safety-net clinics, screening was low despite high satisfaction with the intervention. The best predictors of screening performance mapped to the CFIR constructs Leadership Engagement, Compatibility, Goals & Feedback, Relative Priority, Champions, and Available Resources. These findings facilitate the prioritization of implementation strategies targeting determinants of TDRS performance, potentially increasing its public health impact.
糖尿病视网膜病变(DR)是全球致盲的主要原因,尽管该病易于检测且治疗有效。美国的年度筛查率仍然很低,尤其是对于弱势群体而言,基于远程医疗的 DR 筛查(TDRS)已被证明可以提高筛查率。然而,这些项目的筛查率存在差异,这表明实施情况不一致且存在未解决的障碍。这项工作旨在确定并优先考虑可改变的障碍,以进行有针对性的干预。
在一项探索性混合方法研究的最后阶段,我们针对初级保健保障诊所中参与 TDRS 的多层次利益相关者开发、验证并实施了一项包含 62 个条目的调查。调查项目与先前确定的诊所级筛查决定因素保持一致,并与实施研究综合框架(CFIR)相对应。分类和回归树(CART)分析用于确定和排名对个体 TDRS 筛查表现具有预测性的独立变量。
在总共邀请的 341 名专业人员中,共有 133 名(39%)做出了回应,代表来自 6 个临床系统的 20 家保障诊所。受访者主要为非西班牙裔白人(77%)、女性(94%),年龄在 31 至 65 岁之间(79%)。尽管自我报告的筛查率较低,但对 TDRS 的满意度仍然很高。最重要的筛查决定因素包括:提供者强化 TDRS 的重要性;提供者向工作人员提供明确的指示;有效的提醒;医嘱;将 TDRS 作为常规糖尿病措施的高相对优先级;既定的 TDRS 工作流程;绩效反馈;有效的 TDRS 拥护者;以及领导力支持。
在这项对参与保障诊所 TDRS 的利益相关者的调查中,尽管对干预措施的满意度很高,但筛查率仍然很低。筛查表现的最佳预测因素与 CFIR 结构领导力参与、兼容性、目标和反馈、相对优先级、拥护者和可用资源相对应。这些发现有助于优先考虑针对 TDRS 表现决定因素的实施策略,从而可能提高其公共卫生影响。