Literature DB >> 16953018

Ruling out the need for antibiotics: are we sending the right message?

Rita Mangione-Smith1, Marc N Elliott, Tanya Stivers, Laurie L McDonald, John Heritage.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: To examine the relationships among physician-parent communication practices, physicians' perceptions of parental expectations for antibiotic treatment, and inappropriate antibiotic prescribing for viral upper respiratory tract infections.
DESIGN: Cross-sectional study of pediatric encounters motivated by cold symptoms between October 1, 2000, and June 30, 2001. Each encounter was videotaped. Physicians completed a postvisit survey that measured whether they perceived the parent as expecting antibiotics. Coded communication variables were merged with survey variables. Multivariate analyses identified key predictors of parent-physician communication practices, physician perceptions of parents' expectations for antibiotics, and inappropriate antibiotic prescribing for viral conditions.
SETTING: Twenty-seven pediatric practices in Los Angeles, Calif. PARTICIPANTS: Thirty-eight pediatricians and 522 consecutively approached parents of children with cold symptoms. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Physicians' perceptions of parental expectations for antibiotics, inappropriate antibiotic prescribing, and parental questioning of nonantibiotic treatments.
RESULTS: Physicians were 20.2% more likely to perceive parents as expecting antibiotics when they questioned the physician's treatment plan (P = .004; 95% confidence interval, 6.3%-34.0%). When physicians perceived parents as expecting antibiotics, they were 31.7% more likely to inappropriately prescribe them (P<.001; 95% confidence interval, 16.0%-47.3%). Parents were 24.0% more likely to question the treatment plan when the physician ruled out the need for antibiotics (P = .004; 95% confidence interval, 7.7%-40.3%).
CONCLUSIONS: Parental questioning of the treatment plan increases physicians' perceptions that antibiotics are expected and thus increases inappropriate antibiotic prescribing. Treatment plans that focus on what can be done to make a child feel better, rather than on what is not needed, ie, antibiotics, may decrease inappropriate antibiotic prescribing.

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Year:  2006        PMID: 16953018     DOI: 10.1001/archpedi.160.9.945

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Arch Pediatr Adolesc Med        ISSN: 1072-4710


  22 in total

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2.  Getting to "no": strategies primary care physicians use to deny patient requests.

Authors:  Debora A Paterniti; Tonya L Fancher; Camille S Cipri; Stefan Timmermans; John Heritage; Richard L Kravitz
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3.  Assessment and Treatment Recommendations for Pediatric Pain: The Influence of Patient Race, Patient Gender, and Provider Pain-Related Attitudes.

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5.  ‘What Brings Him Here Today?’: Medical Problem Presentation Involving Children with Autism Spectrum Disorders and Typically Developing Children.

Authors:  Olga Solomon; John Heritage; Larry Yin; Douglas W Maynard; Margaret L Bauman
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6.  Communication practices and antibiotic use for acute respiratory tract infections in children.

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7.  Improving care of upper respiratory infections among Latino Early Head Start parents.

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8.  Antibiotic drug use of children in the Netherlands from 1999 till 2005.

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9.  Outpatient satisfaction: the role of nominal versus perceived communication.

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10.  Roles of Clinician, Patient, and Community Characteristics in the Management of Pediatric Upper Respiratory Tract Infections.

Authors:  Jeffrey P Yaeger; Jonathan L Temte; Lawrence P Hanrahan; P Martinez-Donate
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