Respiratory Care Training for Safety-Net Primary Care Practices.
暂无分享,去创建一个
BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES
Programs designed to enhance the diagnosis and management of asthma and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) in primary care settings have had variable success and have not been broadly implemented. The Respiratory Toolkit was created to bridge this gap.
METHODS
The 2-year program providing primary care training in both asthma and COPD was conducted in an urban federally qualified health center with 13 clinics and 87 staff. The program included interactive training with multidisciplinary teams, in-clinic follow-up trainings, electronic medical record (EMR) tools, and patient-centered educational resources.
RESULTS
For asthma patients, use of spirometry increased from 7% of visits before to 43% after training, severity assessment from 13% to 29%, asthma action plans from 2% to 8%, and prescription of inhaled corticosteroids from 33% to 42%. For COPD patients, spirometry use increased from 21% to 35% of visits, and long-acting beta2-agonists from 19% to 26%. Among undiagnosed smokers, use of the COPD screener increased from 0 to 11% of visits, of spirometry from 4% to 36%, and of advice to quit from 74% to 79%.
CONCLUSIONS
The Respiratory Toolkit produced significant changes in guideline-based care for patients with asthma or COPD; however, time constraints and other barriers prevented full adoption.