Canaway Rachel, Dai Libby, Hallinan Christine, Caddy Cassandra, Hegarty Kelsey, Boyle Douglas
Department of General Practice and Primary Care, The University of Melbourne, Victoria, 3010, Australia.
Melbourne School of Population and Global Health, The University of Melbourne, Victoria, 3010, Australia.
BMC Prim Care. 2024 Dec 2;25(1):408. doi: 10.1186/s12875-024-02662-4.
This study explored the feasibility of integrating a clinical decision support tool into general practice clinical management software in Australia to prompt for alcohol screening among patients who are pregnant or planning a pregnancy. The study aimed to increase understanding of what is an appropriate and acceptable clinical decision support tool, the circumstances when a prompt to use such a screening tool should occur, and the barriers and enablers of successful implementation.
This feasibility study employed a mixed methods approach and purposive sampling to identify key stakeholders to interview. Participants included vendors of clinical software used in Australian general practice, clinicians in general practice, and relevant others. Data from a literature review and 23 interviews were analysed leading to recommendations which were 'sense-tested' by an additional 22 stakeholders.
Although there are at least 18 clinical software packages used in Australian general practice, it is feasible to integrate an alcohol screening tool for pregnancy into software for the majority of general practices in Australia. The AUDIT-C alcohol screening tool for pregnancy was widely accepted as suitable for such a purpose. Clinicians suggested the greatest barriers to screening were lack of time within antenatal consultations and insufficient remuneration for longer consultations. Many clinicians saw opportunity for introducing a multifunctional antenatal tool that could incorporate screening and clinical decision support for alcohol, tobacco and other substance use, mental health, domestic and family violence and potentially other areas informing healthy pregnancy. It could also be used opportunistically for preconception screening and counselling. Deployment of the tool could be supported by an education campaign from professional associations.
The integration of a tool for screening for alcohol use among women who are pregnant or planning pregnancy into general practice clinical software is feasible; however, a multifunctional antenatal screening tool, incorporating other psychosocial elements, was considered more useful than a stand-alone alcohol screening tool. Codesign is needed with vendors and end-users to develop an acceptable tool that can be widely implemented. Issues with GP renumeration need also to be addressed to encourage alcohol screening pre-pregnancy and in the early months of pregnancy.
本研究探讨了将临床决策支持工具集成到澳大利亚全科医疗临床管理软件中的可行性,以便在怀孕或计划怀孕的患者中推动酒精筛查。该研究旨在增进对合适且可接受的临床决策支持工具的理解,使用此类筛查工具提示应出现的情况,以及成功实施的障碍和促成因素。
本可行性研究采用混合方法和目的抽样来确定关键利益相关者进行访谈。参与者包括澳大利亚全科医疗中使用的临床软件供应商、全科医生以及其他相关人员。对文献综述和23次访谈的数据进行了分析,得出了相关建议,并由另外22名利益相关者进行了“合理性检验”。
尽管澳大利亚全科医疗中至少使用了18种临床软件包,但将针对怀孕的酒精筛查工具集成到澳大利亚大多数全科医疗软件中是可行的。用于怀孕的AUDIT-C酒精筛查工具被广泛认为适用于此目的。临床医生表示,筛查的最大障碍是产前咨询时间不足以及较长咨询的报酬不足。许多临床医生认为有机会引入一种多功能产前工具,该工具可以纳入对酒精、烟草和其他物质使用、心理健康、家庭和家庭暴力以及可能影响健康怀孕的其他领域的筛查和临床决策支持。它也可以用于孕前筛查和咨询。该工具的部署可以得到专业协会开展的教育活动的支持。
将针对怀孕或计划怀孕女性的酒精使用筛查工具集成到全科医疗临床软件中是可行的;然而,包含其他社会心理因素的多功能产前筛查工具被认为比单独的酒精筛查工具更有用。需要与软件供应商和最终用户进行协同设计,以开发出一种可广泛实施且可接受的工具。还需要解决全科医生报酬问题,以鼓励孕前和孕早期进行酒精筛查。