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Understanding the influence of parent-clinician communication on antibiotic prescribing for children with respiratory tract infections in primary care: a qualitative observational study using a conversation analysis approach

机译:了解父母-临床医生沟通对初级保健中呼吸道感染儿童抗生素处方的影响:使用对话分析方法的定性观察性研究

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Acute respiratory tract infections (RTI) in children are a common reason for antibiotic prescribing. Clinicians’ prescribing decisions are influenced by perceived parental expectations for antibiotics, however there is evidence that parents actually prefer to avoid antibiotics. This study aimed to investigate the influence of parent-clinician communication on antibiotic prescribing for RTI in children in England. A mixed methods analysis of videoed primary care consultations for children (under 12?years) with acute cough and RTI. Consultations were video-recorded in six general practices in southern England, selected for socio-economic diversity. 56 recordings were transcribed in detail and a subset of recordings and transcripts used to develop a comprehensive interaction-based coding scheme. The scheme was used to examine communication practices between parents and clinicians and how these related to antibiotic or non-antibiotic treatment strategies. Parents’ communication rarely implied an expectation for antibiotics, some explicitly offering a possible viral diagnosis. Clinicians mostly gave, or implied, a viral diagnosis and mainly recommended non-antibiotic treatment strategies. In the minority of cases where parents’ communication behaviours implied they may be seeking antibiotic treatment, antibiotics were not usually prescribed. Where clinicians did prescribe antibiotics, they voiced concern about symptoms or signs, including chest pain, discoloured phlegm, prolonged fever, abnormal chest sounds, or pink /bulging ear drums. We found little evidence of a relationship between parents’ communication behaviours and antibiotic prescribing. Rather, where antibiotics were prescribed, this was associated with clinicians’ expressed concerns regarding symptoms and signs.
机译:儿童急性呼吸道感染(RTI)是开抗生素处方的常见原因。临床医生的处方决定受父母对抗生素的期望的影响,但是有证据表明父母实际上更喜欢避免使用抗生素。这项研究旨在调查在英国儿童中,父母-临床医生交流对抗生素处方RTI的影响。对患有急性咳嗽和RTI的儿童(12岁以下)进行视频初级保健咨询的混合方法分析。在英格兰南部,根据社会经济多样性选择了六种常规做法,对协商过程进行了录像。详细记录了56条录音,并使用录音和抄录的子集来开发基于交互的综合编码方案。该计划用于检查父母与临床医生之间的沟通方式,以及这些方式与抗生素或非抗生素治疗策略的关系。父母之间的交流很少暗示对抗生素的期望,有些明确提供了可能的病毒诊断。临床医生大多给出或暗示进行病毒诊断,并主要推荐非抗生素治疗策略。在少数父母的交流行为暗示他们可能正在寻求抗生素治疗的情况下,通常不开抗生素。在临床医生开了抗生素的地方,他们表达了对症状或体征的担忧,包括胸痛,发痰变色,发烧时间延长,胸腔声音异常或鼓鼓粉红色/鼓鼓。我们几乎没有证据表明父母的沟通行为与抗生素处方之间存在关联。相反,在开了抗生素的地方,这与临床医生对症状和体征的担忧有关。

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