Herman C J, Speroff T, Cebul R D
Department of Medicine, University Hospitals of Cleveland, OH.
J Am Geriatr Soc. 1994 Nov;42(11):1154-9. doi: 10.1111/j.1532-5415.1994.tb06981.x.
To compare three approaches for improving compliance with influenza and pneumococcal vaccination of elderly patients.
Randomized controlled trial using three parallel group practices at a public urban teaching hospital.
Public teaching hospital.
All patients 65 years of age and older (n = 1202) seen by resident physicians (n = 66) attending three ambulatory medical practices from October 1, 1989 to March 31, 1990.
All three provider groups received intensive education in immunization standards. The control group received no further intervention. Staff in the second group offered education to patients at their visits. In the third group, the prevention team, a flowsheet was used, patient education offered, and staff had their tasks redefined to facilitate compliance; for vaccinations, eg, nurses could vaccinate independent of MD initiative.
Medical records were reviewed for the 1202 patients seen, including 756 patients seen during both the 1988-89 and 1989-90 influenza seasons, to determine documented offering and receipt of vaccinations. During the intervention period (1989-90), influenza vaccinations were offered significantly more frequently to prevention team patients (68.3%) than to patients in either the patient education (50.4%) or control (47.6%) groups (P = 0.006), even after adjusting for the patients' prior vaccination status, age, gender, race, and high-risk co-morbidity and for physicians' level of training. Likewise, pneumococcal vaccinations were offered more frequently to previously unvaccinated prevention team patients (28.3%) than to patient education (6.5%) or control (5.4%) group patients (P = 0.001), even after adjusting for the factors using multivariate analysis. Compliance rates did not differ between patient education and control subjects for either vaccine. Pre-intervention physician surveys documented higher perceived than actual compliance for both vaccines, with 89.0% and 52.8% of physicians believing that they complied with influenza and pneumococcal vaccination guidelines, respectively.
The results of this trial provide strong support for organizational changes that involve non-physician personnel to enhance vaccination rates among older adults.
比较三种提高老年患者流感和肺炎球菌疫苗接种依从性的方法。
在一家城市公立教学医院采用三个平行组实践的随机对照试验。
公立教学医院。
1989年10月1日至1990年3月31日期间,在三个门诊医疗实践中由住院医师(66名)诊治的所有65岁及以上患者(n = 1202)。
所有三个医疗服务提供组都接受了免疫接种标准的强化教育。对照组未接受进一步干预。第二组的工作人员在患者就诊时为其提供教育。在第三组,即预防团队,使用了流程表,为患者提供教育,并重新定义了工作人员的任务以促进依从性;例如,对于疫苗接种,护士可以独立于医生的倡议进行接种。
对1202名就诊患者的病历进行了审查,包括在1988 - 89年和1989 - 90年流感季节期间就诊的756名患者,以确定疫苗接种的记录提供情况和接种情况。在干预期间(1989 - 90年),即使在对患者先前的疫苗接种状况、年龄、性别、种族、高危合并症以及医生的培训水平进行调整后,预防团队患者接受流感疫苗接种的频率(68.3%)仍显著高于患者教育组(50.4%)或对照组(47.6%)患者(P = 0.006)。同样,即使在使用多变量分析对因素进行调整后,预防团队中先前未接种疫苗的患者接受肺炎球菌疫苗接种的频率(28.3%)也高于患者教育组(6.5%)或对照组(5.4%)患者(P = 0.001)。两种疫苗在患者教育组和对照组之间的依从率没有差异。干预前的医生调查显示,两种疫苗的感知依从性均高于实际依从性,分别有89.0%和52.8%的医生认为他们遵守了流感和肺炎球菌疫苗接种指南。
该试验结果为涉及非医生人员的组织变革提供了有力支持,以提高老年人的疫苗接种率。