192 research outputs found
What proportion of initially prescribed antidepressants is still being prescribed chronically after 5 years in general practice? A longitudinal cohort analysis
Objectives Antidepressant prescribing almost doubled in the Netherlands between 1996 and 2012, which could be accounted for by longer continuation after the first prescription. This might be problematic given a growing concern of large-scale antidepressant dependence. We aimed to assess the extent and determinants of chronic antidepressant prescribing among patient aged 18 years and older. We hypothesise a relatively large prevalence of chronic (>2 years) prescription.Design A longitudinal observational study based on routinely registered prescription data from general practice.Setting 189 general practices in the Netherlands.Participants 326 025 patients with valid prescription data for all 5 years of the study.Outcome measures Primary outcome measure: the number of patients (N) receiving at least four antidepressant prescriptions in 2011, as well as during each of the four subsequent years. Secondary outcome measure: the above, but specified for selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors and for tricyclic antidepressants.Results Antidepressants were prescribed to almost 7% of our 326 025 participants each year. They were prescribed for depression (38%), anxiety (17%), other psychological disorders (20%) and non-psychological indications (25%). Antidepressants were prescribed in all 5 years to the 42% of the population who had at least four prescriptions dispensed in 2011. Chronic prescribing was higher among women than men, for those aged 45-64 years than for those aged > 65 years and for those treated for depression or anxiety than for non-psychological indications (eg, neuropathic pain). Chronic prescribing also varied markedly among general practices.Conclusion Chronic antidepressant use is common for depression and for anxiety and non-psychological diagnoses. Once antidepressants have been prescribed, general practitioners and other prescribers should be aware of the risks associated with long-term use and should provide annual monitoring of the continued need for therapy.</p
Exploring the black box of quality improvement collaboratives: modelling relations between conditions, applied changes and outcomes
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Introduction</p> <p>Despite the popularity of quality improvement collaboratives (QICs) in different healthcare settings, relatively little is known about the implementation process. The objective of the current study is to learn more about relations between relevant conditions for successful implementation of QICs, applied changes, perceived successes, and actual outcomes.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>Twenty-four Dutch hospitals participated in a dissemination programme based on QICs. A questionnaire was sent to 237 leaders of teams who joined 18 different QICs to measure changes in working methods and activities, overall perceived success, team organisation, and supportive conditions. Actual outcomes were extracted from a database with team performance indicator data. Multi-level analyses were conducted to test a number of hypothesised relations within the cross-classified hierarchical structure in which teams are nested within QICs and hospitals.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>Organisational and external change agent support is related positively to the number of changed working methods and activities that, if increased, lead to higher perceived success and indicator outcomes scores. Direct and indirect positive relations between conditions and perceived success could be confirmed. Relations between conditions and actual outcomes are weak. Multi-level analyses reveal significant differences in organisational support between hospitals. The relation between perceived successes and actual outcomes is present at QIC level but not at team level.</p> <p>Discussion</p> <p>Several of the expected relations between conditions, applied changes and outcomes, and perceived successes could be verified. However, because QICs vary in topic, approach, complexity, and promised advantages, further research is required: first, to understand why some QIC innovations fit better within the context of the units where they are implemented; second, to assess the influence of perceived success and actual outcomes on the further dissemination of projects over new patient groups.</p
Changes in health and primary health care use of Moroccan and Turkish migrants between 2001 and 2005: a longitudinal study
Background: Social environment and health status are related, and changes affecting social
relations may also affect the general health state of a group. During the past few years, several
events have affected the relationships between Muslim immigrants and the non-immigrant
population in many countries. This study investigates whether the health status of the Moroccan
and Turkish immigrants in the Netherlands has changed in four years, whether changes in health
status have had any influence on primary health care use, and which socio-demographic factors
might explain this relationship.
Methods: A cohort of 108 Turkish and 102 Moroccan respondents were interviewed in 2001 and
in 2005. The questionnaire included the SF-36 and the GP contact frequency (in the past two
months). Interviews were conducted in the language preferred by the respondents. Data were
analysed using multivariate linear regression.
Results: The mental health of the Moroccan group improved between 2001 and 2005. Physical
health remained unchanged for both groups. The number of GP contacts decreased with half a
contact/2 months among the Turkish group. Significant predictors of physical health change were:
age, educational level. For mental health change, these were: ethnicity, age, civil status, work
situation in 2001, change in work situation. For change in GP contacts: ethnicity, age and change in
mental and physical health.
Conclusion: Changes in health status concerned the mental health component. Changes in health
status were paired with changes in health care utilization. Among the Turkish group, an unexpected
decrease in GP contacts was noticed, whilst showing a generally unchanged health status. Further
research taking perceived quality of care into account might help shedding some light on this
outcome.
Personal protective equipment for healthcare workers during COVID-19: developing and applying a questionnaire and assessing associations between infection rates and shortages across 19 countries
This study aimed to assess the preparedness of European countries regarding personal protective equipment (PPE) for health and care workers (HCWs), the COVID-19 infection rates of HCWs compared to the general working age population, and the association between these. We developed a PPE-preparedness scale based on responses to a questionnaire from experts in the Health Systems and Policy Monitor network, with a response rate of 19 out of 31 countries. COVID-19 infection data were retrieved form the European center for Disease Prevention and Control. Shortages of PPE were found in most countries, in particular in home care and long-term care. HCW infection rates, compared to the general population, varied strongly between countries, influenced by different testing regimes. We found no relationships between HCW infection rates, PPE preparedness and shortages of PPE. Improved surveillance in the population as well as for HCWS are needed to be able to better assess these relationships
Is networking different with doctors working part-time? Differences in social networks of part-time and full-time doctors
Background: Part-time working is a growing phenomenon in medicine, which is expected to
influence informal networks at work differently compared to full-time working. The opportunity to
meet and build up social capital at work has offered a basis for theoretical arguments.
Methods: Twenty-eight teams of medical specialists in the Netherlands, including 226 individuals
participated in this study. Interviews with team representatives and individual questionnaires were
used. Data were gathered on three types of networks: relationships of consulting, communication
and trust. For analyses, network and multilevel applications were used. Differences between
individual doctors and between teams were both analysed, taking the dependency structure of the
data into account, because networks of individual doctors are not independent. Teams were
divided into teams with and without doctors working part-time.
Results and Discussion: Contrary to expectations we found no impact of part-time working on
the size of personal networks, neither at the individual nor at the team level. The same was found
regarding efficient reachability. Whereas we expected part-time doctors to choose their relations
as efficiently as possible, we even found the opposite in intended relationships of trust, implying that
efficiency in reaching each other was higher for full-time doctors. But we found as expected that in
mixed teams with part-time doctors the frequency of regular communication was less compared
to full-time teams. Furthermore, as expected the strength of the intended relationships of trust of
part-time and full-time doctors was equally high.
Conclusion: From these findings we can conclude that part-time doctors are not aiming at
efficiency by limiting the size of networks or by efficient reachability, because they want to contact
their colleagues directly in order to prevent from communication errors. On the other hand,
together with the growth of teams, we found this strategy, focussed on reaching all colleagues, was
diminishing. And our data confirmed that formalisation was increasing together with the growth of
teams.
Compliance with a time-out procedure intended to prevent wrong surgery in hospitals:results of a national patient safety programme in the Netherlands
OBJECTIVE: To prevent wrong surgery, the WHO 'Safe Surgery Checklist' was introduced in 2008. The checklist comprises a time-out procedure (TOP): the final step before the start of the surgical procedure where the patient, surgical procedure and side/site are reviewed by the surgical team. The aim of this study is to evaluate the extent to which hospitals carry out the TOP before anaesthesia in the operating room, whether compliance has changed over time, and to determine factors that are associated with compliance.DESIGN: Evaluation study involving observations.SETTING: Operating rooms of 2 academic, 4 teaching and 12 general Dutch hospitals.PARTICIPANTS: A random selection was made from all adult patients scheduled for elective surgery on the day of the observation, preferably involving different surgeons and different procedures.RESULTS: Mean compliance with the TOP was 71.3%. Large differences between hospitals were observed. No linear trend was found in compliance during the study period. Compliance at general and teaching hospitals was higher than at academic hospitals. Compliance decreased with the age of the patient, general surgery showed lower compliance in comparison with other specialties and compliance was higher when the team was focused on the TOP.CONCLUSIONS: Large differences in compliance with the TOP were observed between participating hospitals which can be attributed at least in part to the type of hospital, surgical specialty and patient characteristics. Hospitals do not comply consistently with national guidelines to prevent wrong surgery and further implementation as well as further research into non-compliance is needed.</p
Cerebrovascular risk factors and subsequent depression in older general practice patients
Background: This general practice-based case-control study tested the association between cerebrovascular risk factors (CVRFs) and the development of later-life depression by focusing on the impact of exposure duration to CVRFs and the modifying influence of age at depression onset. Methods: Cases were 286 patients aged >/=50 years with a first diagnosis of depression at age >/=50 years. Nondepressed controls (N=832) were individually matched for age, gender and practice. CVRF diagnoses (hypertension, diabetes mellitus, cardiovascular conditions) prior to depression were determined. Analyses controlled for education, somatic and nondepressive psychiatric disease. Results: No CVRF variable examined was significantly associated with subsequent depression in the total sample. An unexpected impact of age at onset of depression was observed: the odds ratio associated with having any CVRF was smaller for patients with age at onset >/=70 years than for patients with onset between ages 50-59 years (p=.002) and 60-69 years (p=.067). Subsequent analyses excluding patients with onset at age >/=70 years revealed that CVRF variables, including long-term exposure to CVRFs, significantly increased the odds of subsequent depression with onset between ages 50 and 69 years. Limitations: Reliance on GPs' records of morbidity may have resulted in bias towards underestimation in patients with depression onset at age >/=70 years. Conclusions: Our findings suggest that CVRFs play a relevant role in the development of depression with onset between ages 50 and 69 years, but no evidence was found that they contribute to the occurrence of depression with onset at age >/=70 years. Replication is warranted to exclude the possibility of bias. (aut. ref.
All in the Family:Headaches and Abdominal Pain as Indicators for Consultation Patterns in Families
PURPOSE Headaches and abdominal pain are examples of minor ailments that are generally self-limiting. We examined the extent to which patterns of visits to family physicians for minor ailments, such as headaches or abdominal pain, cluster within families. METHODS Using information from the Second Dutch National Survey of General Practice for 96 family practices, we analyzed the visits of families with at least 1 child aged 12 years or younger during a period of 12 months. RESULTS Family patterns were clearest in the visits of mothers and children. A large part of the similarity in the frequencies of contact by mothers and daughters could be attributed to shared family factors. This fi nding was especially true for families with a child who had a headache or abdominal pain as the presenting symptom, rather than physical trauma or chronic disease. Within families, we did not fi nd any specific patterns of diagnoses. Diagnoses were recorded by family physicians. In the case of young children, family similarity may have been overestimated because parents initiated the visits and put their childâs health problem into words. CONCLUSIONS Visits to family physicians for headaches or abdominal pain can be seen as indicators of consultation patterns in families. Family patterns related to minor ailments are likely to be a result of socialization. Family consultation patterns might point toward specifi c needs of families and consequently at a different approach to treatment
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