| Literature DB >> 23119077 |
Juan E Corral1, Lauren D Arnold, Erwin E Argueta, Akshay Ganju, Joaquín Barnoya.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Guatemala is currently undergoing an epidemiologic transition. Preventive services are key to reducing the burden of non-communicable diseases, and smoking counseling and cessation are among the most cost-effective and wide-reaching strategies. Internal medicine physicians are fundamental to providing such services, and their knowledge is a cornerstone of non-communicable disease control.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 23119077 PMCID: PMC3485332 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0048640
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Internal medicine physicians’ demographics.
| n = 394 | |
|
| 28 (25–34) |
|
| |
| Male | 244 (61.93) |
| Female | 150 (38.07) |
|
| |
| Intern | 89 (22.59) |
| Resident | 198 (50.25) |
| Attending | 107 (27.16) |
|
| 351 (89.08) |
|
| |
| Public | 286 (72.59) |
| Other | 108 (27.41) |
|
| 20 (0–50) |
Guatemala. 2011.
Eighty three (41.92%) first year residents, 57(28.79%) second year, 48(24.24%) third year, and 10(5.05%) chiefs of residents.
Seventeen (15.89%) department directors, 63 (58.88%) program directors, and 27 (25.23%) floor attendings.
Of those trained abroad, 14 (32.56%) trained in Cuba, 11 (25.58) in Honduras, 10 (23.25%) in El Salvador, and 8 (18.61) in other countries.
Physicians’ recommendations for simulated cases and preventive service of choice.a
| PreventiveService | Recommended byGuatemalan MoH | USPSTFGrade | Recommended bystaff, n = 394 (%) | Service ofchoice | % | Availability at participating Hospitals, n = 9 (%) |
| Ask about tobacco use | Yes | A | 382 (97.45) | NA | 9 (100) | |
| Tobacco cessation intervention | Yes | A | 372 (99.20) | Counseling only | 59.36 | 9 (100) |
| Counseling with pharmacotherary | 18.32 | 0 (0) | ||||
| Nicotine replacement | 12.03 | 0 (0) | ||||
| Varenicline | 6.15 | 0 (0) | ||||
| Bupropion | 2.14 | 0 (0) | ||||
| Other/NR | 2.01 | |||||
| Hypertension screening | Yes | A | 385 (98.97) | NA | 9 (100) | |
| Cervical cancer screening | Yes | A | 378 (95.94) | Pap-smear | 92.59 | 9 (100) |
| VIA | 6.61 | 7 (77.78) | ||||
| Other/NR | 0.79 | |||||
| Colorectal cancer screening | Not mentioned | A | 218 (55.75) | Colonoscopy | 50.68 | 8 (88.89) |
| FOBT | 40.72 | 5 (55.56) | ||||
| Sigmoidoscopy | 5.43 | 5 (55.56) | ||||
| Other/NR | 3.17 | |||||
| Lipid disorders screening | Not mentioned | A | 314 (80.51) | NA | 8 (88.89) | |
| Breast cancer screening | Yes | B | 366 (93.13) | Clinical examination | 55.59 | 9 (100) |
| Mammogram | 41.42 | 7 (77.78) | ||||
| Other/NR | 3.00 | |||||
| CHD screening | Not mentioned | D | 237 (60.31) | NA | 9 (100) | |
| Healthy diet counseling | Yes | I | 373 (94.67) | NA | 9 (100) | |
| Diabetes screening | Not mentioned | I | 335 (85.46) | Fasting glucose | 70.03 | 9 (100) |
| Glycosilated hemoglobin | 18.99 | 8 (88.89) | ||||
| Glucose tolerance test | 7.12 | 9 (100) | ||||
| Other/NR | 3.86 | |||||
| Prostate cancer screening | Not mentioned | I | 316 (81.65) | Prostate specific antigen | 53.87 | 6 (66.67) |
| Digital rectal exam | 40.87 | 9 (100) | ||||
| Other/NR | 5.26 |
All simulated cases were asymptomatic patients without any risk factors.
Percentages were calculated with the staff that answered affirmatively divided by the staff that answered each question.
Services are considered available if equipment or trained personnel are available regardless of tests being approved for screening purposes or personnel having dedicated time for preventive interventions.
Using these screening methods is considered a grade I recommendation.
Electrocardiogram for CHD screening.
MoH: Ministry of Health, USPSTF: U. S. Preventive Services Task Force, NA: Not Available, NR: No Response, VIA: Visual Inspection with Acetic Acid, FOBT: Fecal Occult Blood Testing, CHD: Coronary Heart Disease.
Physicians’ recommendations for simulated cases stratified by Guatemalan MoH recommendations.a
| Preventive service | % of staff that recommended all | p |
| Recommended by Guatemalan MoH | 88.1 | <0.001 |
| Not recommended by Guatemalan MoH | 38.7 | |
| Recommended by Guatemalan MoH, colorectal cancer screening and lipid disorders screening. | 48.69 | 0.49 |
| Other services | 51.43 |
All simulated cases were asymptomatic patients without any risk factors.
Other services are coronary heart disease, diabetes and prostate cancer screening.
MoH: Ministry of Health.
Percentage of physicians that recommended each preventive service, according to training level and hospital type.
| Training level | Hospital | ||||||
| Preventive Service | Intern n = 89 | Resident n = 198 | Attending n = 107 | p | Public | Other | p |
| Ask about tobacco use | 98.86 | 96.46 | 98.11 | 0.5 | 97.18 | 98.15 | 0.7 |
| Tobacco cessation intervention | 97.70 | 99.46 | 100.00 | 0.2 | 99.26 | 99.04 | 0.9 |
| Hypertension screening | 98.88 | 98.97 | 99.06 | 0.9 | 98.59 | 100.00 | 0.6 |
| Cervical cancer screening | 95.51 | 94.95 | 98.13 | 0.4 | 95.45 | 97.22 | 0.6 |
| Colorectal cancer screening | 40.91 | 54.08 | 71.03 | <0.001 | 50.70 | 69.16 | 0.001 |
| Lipid disorders screening | 74.16 | 79.49 | 87.74 | 0.05 | 77.19 | 89.52 | 0.006 |
| Breast cancer screening | 95.51 | 91.37 | 94.39 | 0.4 | 91.58 | 97.22 | 0.05 |
| CHD screening | 60.67 | 58.38 | 63.55 | 0.7 | 58.25 | 65.74 | 0.2 |
| Healthy diet counseling | 92.13 | 95.45 | 95.33 | 0.5 | 94.06 | 96.30 | 0.4 |
| Diabetes screening | 78.65 | 86.80 | 88.68 | 0.1 | 83.16 | 91.59 | 0.03 |
| Prostate cancer screening | 72.73 | 80.93 | 90.48 | 0.006 | 77.86 | 91.59 | 0.002 |
Percentages were calculated with the staff that answered affirmatively divided by the staff that answered each question.
Public hospitals are operated by the Ministry of Public Health and Social Welfare (MSPAS), all services are free of cost, no insurance required.
This includes the Guatemalan Social Security Institute (IGSS), the Military Hospital and two private hospitals.
Electrocardiogram for CHD screening.
Physicians’ suggested starting age and frequency for each preventive service compared to Guatemalan MoH guidelines and USPSTF recommendations.
| Starting age | Frequency | |||||
| Preventiveservice | Physicians’recommendations | Guatemalan MoHguidelines, years | USPSTFrecommendations,years | Physicians’recommendations,preferredfrequency (%) | GuatemalanMoH guidelines(% correct) | USPSTFrecommendations(% correct) |
| Ask about tobacco use | Annual (96.77) | Annual | Annual | |||
| Hypertension screening | 26.26 (8.92) | 20 | 18 | Annual (98.42) | Annual | Annual |
| Cervical cancer screening | 25.92 (8.89) | 25 or after onset of sexual activity | 21 or 3y after onset of sexual activity | |||
| Pap-smear | Annual (91.33) | Every 3y (1.73) | Every 3y (1.73) | |||
| VIA | Annual (84.00) | Every 3y (4.00) | NA | |||
| Lipid disorders screening | 32.39 (8.40) | NA | 35 | Annual (81.11) | NA | Every 5y (1.63) |
| Breast cancer screening | 37.46 (7.45) | NA | 50 | |||
| Mammogram | Annual (73.51) | NA | Every 2y (13.25) | |||
| Clinical examination | Annual (95.57) | Annual | NA | |||
| Colorectal cancer screening | 43.62 (7.58) | NA | 50 | |||
| Colonoscopy | Every 5y (25.89) | NA | Every 10y (12.50) | |||
| FOBT | Annual (68.18) | NA | Annual | |||
| Sigmoidoscopy | Annual (66.67) | NA | Every 3y (16.67) | |||
| CHD screening | Annual (65.95) | NA | NA | |||
| Healthy diet counseling | Annual (94.58) | Annual | NA | |||
| Diabetes screening | Annual (85.07) | NA | NA | |||
| Prostate cancer screening | 44.39 (6.12) | NA | NA | |||
| Prostate specific antigen | Annual (67.82) | NA | NA | |||
| Digital exam | Annual (63.64) | NA | NA | |||
Recommendations were asked with simulated case scenarios of asymptomatic patients without any risk factors that came annually for a health check.
The frequency of screening is still uncertain.
Lipid disorder screening questions were specific for male patients.
Electrocardiogram for CHD screening.
MoH: Ministry of Health, NA: Not available, VIA: Visual Inspection with Acetic Acid, FOBT: Fecal Occult Blood Testing, CHD: Coronary Heart Disease.