| Literature DB >> 31510938 |
Pär-Daniel Sundvall1,2,3, Chrysoula E Papachristodoulou4, Lena Nordeman4,5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Otoscopy alone has low sensitivity and specificity for acute otitis media (AOM). Otomicroscopy and pneumatic methods are superior to otoscopy. However, these methods require clinical skills. The use of different diagnostic methods for AOM differs between countries and has not been evaluated in Sweden since new guidelines were introduced in 2010. This study aimed to describe the extent of which diagnostic methods and written advice were used for AOM in children 1 to 12 years old.Entities:
Keywords: Acute otitis media; Children; Diagnosis; Guidelines; Primary health care
Year: 2019 PMID: 31510938 PMCID: PMC6739966 DOI: 10.1186/s12875-019-1018-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Fam Pract ISSN: 1471-2296 Impact factor: 2.497
Fig. 1Participants’ flowchart
Demographic data for the study group (n = 111)
| Gender (female) % (n) | 43% (48/111) |
|---|---|
| Age (years)1 | 47 (11) |
| Clinical role % (n) | |
| General practitioner | 68% (75/111) |
| Specialist trainee in primary care | 32% (36/111) |
| Work experience (years)2 | 12 (9.7) -- 10 (3.0–20) |
| Number of assessed children per month % (n) | |
| < 5 | 36% (38/106) |
| 5–15 | 60% (64/106) |
| > 15 | 3.8% (4/106) |
| Access to all diagnostic methods3 | 81% (90/111) |
| Not access to % (n): | |
| otoscopy | 0% (0/111) |
| pneumatic otoscopy | 7.2% (8/111) |
| otomicroscopy | 5.4% (6/111) |
| tympanometry | 2.7% (3/111) |
| pneumatic otoscopy + otomicroscopy | 0.0090% (1/111) |
| otomicroscopy + tympanometry | 0.0090% (1/111) |
| unsure about other methods than otoscopy | 1.8% (2/111) |
1 Mean (SD). Available for analysis (n = 110)
2 The first figure is the mean value (SD). The second figure is the median (25:th - 75:th percentile)
3 Otoscopy, pneumatic otoscopy, otomicroscopy and tympanometry
Use of diagnostic methods in acute otitis media and advice to parents by GPs1 and STs2
| Never | Seldom | Sometimes | Often | Always | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Otoscopy | 0% (0/111) | 0.90% (1/111) | 0.90% (1/111) | 1.8% (2/111) | 96% (107/111) |
| Pneumatic otoscopy | 29% (29/101) | 29% (29/101) | 25% (25/101) | 16% (16/101) | 2.0% (2/101) |
| Otomicroscopy | 15% (15/103) | 20% (21/103) | 49% (50/103) | 15% (15/103) | 1.9% (2/103) |
| Tympanometry | 36% (38/105) | 24% (25/105) | 29% (30/105) | 9.5% (10/105) | 1.9% (2/105) |
| Pneumatic otoscopy and/or tympanometry | 14% (15/108) | 21% (23/108) | 38% (41/108) | 23% (25/108) | 3.7% (4/108) |
| Combination of pneumatic otoscopy/otomicroscopy and tympanometry | 50% (49/98) | 26% (25/98) | 21% (21/98) | 3.1% (3/98) | 0% (0/98) |
| Advice to parents3 | |||||
| Oral | 0% (0/111) | 0% (0/111) | 0.90% (1/111) | 5.4% (6/111) | 94% (104/111) |
| Written | 41% (40/97) | 24% (23/97) | 16% (16/97) | 12% (12/97) | 6.2% (6/97) |
1 General practitioners (n = 75)
2 Specialist trainees in primary care (n = 36)
3 Advice includes pain relieving and follow-up if choice for watchful waiting was made
Logistic regression to evaluate the use of diagnostic methods for acute otitis media in children
| Unadjusted odds ratio (95% CI; | Adjusted odds ratio1 (95% CI; p-value) | |
|---|---|---|
| Pneumatic otoscopy | ||
| GP (ST is reference) | 2.4 (0.99–5.9; p = 0.052) | 2.1 (0.83–5.4; p = 0.12) |
| Female gender | 0.52 (0.22–1.2; | 0.64 (0.26–1.6; |
| Otomicroscopy | ||
| GP (ST is reference) | 4.0 (1.3–12; | 4.9 (1.5–17; |
| Female gender | 1.1 (0.36–3.3; | 1.9 (0.54–6.4; |
| Tympanometry | ||
| GP (ST is reference) | 0.83 (0.36–1.9; | 0.90 (0.37–2.2; |
| Female gender | 1.3 (0.59–3.0; | 1.3 (0.54–3.0; |
| Combination2 | ||
| GP (ST is reference) | 1.1 (0.47–2.5; | 1.3 (0.54–3.2; |
| Female gender | 1.7 (0.74–3.7; | 1.8 (0.77–4.2; |
1 The use of diagnostic methods in 1 to 12 year old children consulting primary health care was dichotomised in two categories, never using (0) or seldom to always using (1) the method, adjusted for general practitioners (GPs) versus specialist trainees in primary care (STs) and their sex
2 Combination of pneumatic otoscopy/otomicroscopy and tympanometry
Statistically significant findings are bold