GENERAL-PRACTITIONERS MANAGEMENT OF FEMALE URINARY-INCONTINENCE

被引:10
|
作者
SANDVIK, H
HUNSKAAR, S
机构
[1] Division for General Practice, Department of Public Health and Primary Health Care, University of Bergen
关键词
URINARY INCONTINENCE; FEMALE; FAMILY PRACTICE; QUALITY OF HEALTH CARE; MEDICAL RECORDS;
D O I
10.3109/02813439508996757
中图分类号
R19 [保健组织与事业(卫生事业管理)];
学科分类号
摘要
Objectives - To investigate the prevailing management of female urinary incontinence by Norwegian general practitioners (GPs), and to compare information given by the patients with information in their medical records. Design - Incontinent women who had received reimbursement for incontinence aids or drugs were identified by the local Insurance Offices, and a random sample was interviewed about what examinations and treatments they had received. Similar information was later collected from their GPs. Setting - The Bergen area, Norway. Subjects - Forty-eight GPs and 82 patients. Main outcome measures - Actions taken according to the patients and their medical records. Kappa statistics were used to evaluate the strength of agreement. Results - The GPs had done a gynaecological examination in 54%, a leakage provocation test in 12%, and a urinalysis in 73% of the patients. Thirty-two per cent of the women had been instructed in pelvic floor exercises and 13% in bladder training. The GPs had prescribed oestrogens for 48% of the older women (>59 years), anticholinergics for 29% of those with urge or mixed incontinence. Overall Kappa between the two data sources was 0.37. Conclusion - GPs' incontinence management can be improved, especially regarding gynaecological examination, pelvic floor exercises, and the prescription of oestrogens. Retrospective chart data or patient interviews are unreliable data sources.
引用
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页码:168 / 174
页数:7
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