| Literature DB >> 35975172 |
Anni Matthes1,2, Florian Wolf1, Jutta Bleidorn1, Robby Markwart1,2.
Abstract
Background: The use of point-of-care tests (POCTs) has been a central strategy to cope with the COVID-19 pandemic. Yet, evidence on the application and consequences of POCTs within medical settings is rare. Purpose: To assess and understand patient perspectives on molecular point-of-care SARS-CoV-2 testing conducted in primary care.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; POCT; acceptance; feasibility; rapid test
Year: 2022 PMID: 35975172 PMCID: PMC9375998 DOI: 10.2147/PPA.S372366
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Patient Prefer Adherence ISSN: 1177-889X Impact factor: 2.314
Characteristics of Patients Surveyed
| Number of Patients Surveyed | 215 | (100%) |
|---|---|---|
| Result of molecular SARS-CoV-2 rapid test (n, %*) | ||
| COVID-19 positive | 29 | (15.2%) |
| COVID-19 negative | 155 | (81.2%) |
| Not specified | 7 | (3.7%) |
| NA** | 24 | |
| Severity of the symptoms (n, %*) | ||
| None | 30 | (15.2%) |
| Mild | 86 | (43.4%) |
| Moderate | 58 | (29.3%) |
| Severe | 18 | (9.1%) |
| Do not know/not specified | 6 | (3.0%) |
| NA** | 17 | |
| Age group (n, %*) | ||
| 0–17 years | 19 | (9.3%) |
| 18–35 years | 49 | (24.0%) |
| 36–50 years | 63 | (30.9%) |
| 51–65 years | 51 | (25.0%) |
| 66–80 years | 20 | (9.8%) |
| > 80 years | 2 | (1.0%) |
| NA** | 11 | |
| Gender (n, %*) | ||
| Female | 111 | (55.2%) |
| Male | 90 | (44.8%) |
| NA** | 14 | |
| Gender ratio (f/m) | 1.23 | |
| Population size of place of residence (n, %*) | ||
| < 5000 | 82 | (39.9%) |
| 5000–20,000 | 42 | (20.7%) |
| 20,000–100,000 | 40 | (19.7%) |
| > 100,000 | 32 | (15.8%) |
| Do not know/not specified | 8 | (3.9%) |
| NA** | 12 |
Notes: *Percentage among valid answers (excluding NA). **No valid answers: item not answered or unclear answer.
Figure 1Patient’s rating of molecular SARS-CoV-2 rapid testing conducted in primary care practice. (A) Importance rating on test characteristics. (B) Approval rating on aspects concerning implementation of molecular SARS-CoV-2 rapid testing in primary care. Percentages within the bars are only presented if ≥3%.
Personal Consequences of Immediate Test Result for Exemplary Patients*
| Category and Subcategory | Example |
|---|---|
| Pandemic measures (n=19) | |
| Quarantine decision (n=12) | “immediately quarantine”; “not continuing the isolating measures” |
| Notification of contact persons (n=7) | “inform family and friends” |
| Certainty of action (n=20) | |
| General behavioral certainty (n=8) | “I know how to proceed further.” |
| Work (n=6) | “starting my nursing internship” |
| Family interaction (n=3) | “helps me to decide if I should meet my family” |
| Vaccination appointment (n=2) | “able to attend appointment for corona vaccination” |
| Other (n=1) | “I can buy groceries on the way home from the physician”s office.’ |
| Reassurance (n=12) | |
| Felt secureness (n=6) | “I feel safer, for myself and the people around me.” |
| Emotional relief (n=6) | “mental health”; “relief!!!” |
| No consequences (n=2) | “none” |
Notes: *based on free-text answers of 43 patients, who mentioned a total of 53 personal consequences (some patients stated more than one consequence).