Literature DB >> 17620528

Patient factors that physicians use to assign asthma treatment.

Gregory B Diette1, Cecilia M Patino, Barry Merriman, Laura Paulin, Kristin Riekert, Sande Okelo, Kathy Thompson, Jerry A Krishnan, Ruth Quartey, Deanna Perez-Williams, Cynthia Rand.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Asthma guidelines recommend severity assessment to assign treatment, often quantified as current control. It is unknown how strongly control assessment affects clinician treatment decisions, nor if control is sufficient.
METHODS: To determine patient factors used by physicians to assign treatment, we surveyed pulmonary specialists (PSs) and family physicians (FPs) using vignettes. We tested whether recent acute care (hospitalization 6 months ago), bother (patient bothered by asthma), control (symptom or reliever medication frequency), and direction (change since last visit) influence treatment decisions. Factors used for stepping up and stepping down were assessed.
RESULTS: A total of 461 physicians participated (236 PSs and 225 FPs). As expected, physicians indicated a greater likelihood of stepping up treatment for persistent (4-5 times per week) than for intermittent (1 time per 2 weeks) symptoms (PSs 97% vs 24%, P < .001; FPs 97% vs 33%, P < .001). All else being equal, physicians were more likely to step up treatment of a patient with intermittent symptoms if the patient reported recent acute care (PSs 49% vs 24%; FPs 72% vs 33%), was bothered (PSs 81% vs 24%; FPs 80% vs 33%), or was worse since the last visit (PSs 68% vs 24%; FPs 66% vs 33%) (all P < .001). These factors were also predictive of stepping down from high-intensity therapy and remained significant in multivariate analyses (all P < .05).
CONCLUSIONS: Asthma control greatly influences physician decisions about asthma treatments. However, recent acute care, bother, and direction of illness also influence decisions, particularly those that involve increasing the amount of medication prescribed. Further work is needed to determine if use of these additional indicators leads to better asthma outcomes.

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Year:  2007        PMID: 17620528     DOI: 10.1001/archinte.167.13.1360

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Arch Intern Med        ISSN: 0003-9926


  21 in total

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4.  The Pediatric Asthma Control and Communication Instrument asthma questionnaire: for use in diverse children of all ages.

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5.  Validation of parental reports of asthma trajectory, burden, and risk by using the pediatric asthma control and communication instrument.

Authors:  Sande O Okelo; Michelle N Eakin; Kristin A Riekert; Alvin P Teodoro; Andrew L Bilderback; Darcy A Thompson; Antonio Loiaza-Martinez; Cynthia S Rand; Shannon Thyne; Gregory B Diette; Cecilia M Patino
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9.  Patient factors used by pediatricians to assign asthma treatment.

Authors:  Sande O Okelo; Cecilia M Patino; Kristin A Riekert; Barry Merriman; Andrew Bilderback; Nadia N Hansel; Kathy Thompson; Jennifer Thompson; Ruth Quartey; Cynthia S Rand; Gregory B Diette
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10.  Results from the national sepsis practice survey: predictions about mortality and morbidity and recommendations for limitation of care orders.

Authors:  James M O'Brien; Scott K Aberegg; Naeem A Ali; Gregory B Diette; Stanley Lemeshow
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