| Literature DB >> 16364176 |
Anne Pelet1, Jacques Besson, Alain Pécoud, Bernard Favrat.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: In Switzerland, general practitioners (GPs) manage most of the patients receiving methadone maintenance treatment (MMT).Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2005 PMID: 16364176 PMCID: PMC1351183 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2296-6-51
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Fam Pract ISSN: 1471-2296 Impact factor: 2.497
Profile of office-based physicians with and without methadone substitution treatment
| PT (n = 352) | PWT (n = 231) | X2, p value | |
| Male | 84.9% | 82.7% | X2 = 0.4; p = 0.563 |
| Practice in a town with >10,000 inhabitants | 60% | 66.2% | |
| Practice in a town with <10,000 inhabitants | 40% | 33.8% | X2 = 2.3; p = 0.136 |
| Works alone | 57.9% | 65.7% | |
| Works in a group practice (with other doctors) | 42.1% | 34.3% | X2 = 3.5; p = 0.068 |
| Median no. of years in practice* (mean SD) | 15 (14.8 ± 7.4) | 17 (17 ± 8.6) | Z = -3.2; p = 0.001 |
PT = General practitioners with patients receiving methadone substitution treatment
PWT = General practitioners without patients receiving methadone substitution treatment
*P value was calculated using the Mann-Whitney test; other P values were calculated using Fisher's exact test
General practitioners who treat patients with methadone substitution (PT, n = 352)
| Would you accept new MMT patients? | Yes: 23.9 % | No: 73% (missing data: 3.1%) |
| Mean (SD) | Median | |
| Actual number of patients on methadone treatment? | 6.2 (± 9.04) | 4 |
| How many patients would you | 5.8 (± 6.9) | 4 |
| Highest daily dose of methadone you ever prescribed: | 120.4 mg (± 95.9) | 100 mg (mode: 100 mg) |
PT = General practitioners with patients receiving methadone substitution treatment
PWT = General practitioners without patients receiving methadone substitution treatment
MMT = Methadone maintenance treatment
What could be done to improve the management of patients on methadone maintenance treatment (MMT)?
| Question: | PT (n = 352) | PWT (n = 231) | X2 | P |
| Better reimbursement for care | 58.8% | Question not asked | ||
| Better post-graduate training | 50% | 31.2% | 56.9 | < 0.001 |
| Group discussion of clinical cases | 50% | 22.9% | 42.8 | < 0.001 |
| Better knowledge of psychiatric pathologies | 46.6% | 21.2% | 38.7 | < 0.001 |
| More political commitment to drug-addicted patients | 44.6% | 64.1% | 21.2 | < 0.001 |
| More accessible specialized professionals | 42% | 37.2% | 1.3 | 0.262 |
| Better training at medical school | 41.2% | 19% | 6.0 | 0.014 |
| Better screening for drug addiction | 18.2% | 16.5% | 0.3 | 0.656 |
| Stronger political repression of illegal drugs | 9.7% | 19.5% | 11.5 | 0.001 |
PT = General practitioners with patients on methadone substitution treatment
PWT = General practitioners without patients on methadone substitution treatment
Questions about reimbursement and training for general practitioners who treat patients with methadone substitution (PT: n = 352)
| Question | yes | |
| Do you have problems getting medical care reimbursed? | 56.7% | |
| How did you learn about MMT | learning through their own practice? | 76.1% |
| post-graduate training? | 58% | |
| self-taught? (books or scientific articles) | 49.7% | |
| during your internship? | 15.6% | |
| Would you like to participate in addiction-related training for doctors? | 65.3% | |
| Would you like to participate in workshops with physicians and others professionals involved in the field? | 50% | |
PT = General practitioners with patients receiving methadone substitution treatment
MMT = Methadone maintenance treatment
Why do you refuse care for methadone treatment patients (general practitioners with no patients on methadone substitution treatment) (PWTs) (n = 231)
| Question | yes |
| Non-compliant patients | 59.7% |
| A specialized center is better | 57.1% |
| Time-consuming | 54.5% |
| Lack of specialized training | 52.4% |
| Fear of being overwhelmed by drug-addicted patients | 48.9% |
| Feeling of powerlessness toward drug-addicted patients | 41.6% |
| Difficulties with authorizations (too much paperwork) | 40.3% |
| Lack of reimbursement for medical care | 38.1% |
| Management with other professionals too difficult | 38.1% |
| Difficulties with accompanying psychiatric disorders | 36.4% |
| Fear of manipulation by drug-addicted patients | 33.3% |
| Lack of knowledge about illegal substances and medications | 31.2% |
| Past experience of burnout with drug-addicted patients | 29.4% |
| Fear of theft | 28.1% |
| Fear of problems with other, non-drug-addicted patients | 27.7% |
| Fear of being threatened in the office | 24.7% |
| Fear of being considered "the drug-addict doctor" | 11.7% |
| Existing centers are adequate for this population | 11.3% |
PWT = General practitioners without patients receiving methadone substitution treatment