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Labour intensity of guidelines may have a greater effect on adherence than GPs' workload

BACKGROUND: Physicians' heavy workload is often thought to jeopardise the quality of care and to be a barrier to improving quality. The relationship between these has, however, rarely been investigated. In this study quality of care is defined as care 'in accordance with professional guide...

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Autores principales: van den Berg, Michael J, de Bakker, Dinny H, Spreeuwenberg, Peter, Westert, Gert P, Braspenning, Jozé CC, van der Zee, Jouke, Groenewegen, Peter P
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2009
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2791751/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19943953
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2296-10-74
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author van den Berg, Michael J
de Bakker, Dinny H
Spreeuwenberg, Peter
Westert, Gert P
Braspenning, Jozé CC
van der Zee, Jouke
Groenewegen, Peter P
author_facet van den Berg, Michael J
de Bakker, Dinny H
Spreeuwenberg, Peter
Westert, Gert P
Braspenning, Jozé CC
van der Zee, Jouke
Groenewegen, Peter P
author_sort van den Berg, Michael J
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Physicians' heavy workload is often thought to jeopardise the quality of care and to be a barrier to improving quality. The relationship between these has, however, rarely been investigated. In this study quality of care is defined as care 'in accordance with professional guidelines'. In this study we investigated whether GPs with a higher workload adhere less to guidelines than those with a lower workload and whether guideline recommendations that require a greater time investment are less adhered to than those that can save time. METHODS: Data were used from the Second Dutch National survey of General Practice (DNSGP-2). This nationwide study was carried out between April 2000 and January 2002. A multilevel logistic-regression analysis was conducted of 170,677 decisions made by GPs, referring to 41 Guideline Adherence Indicators (GAIs), which were derived from 32 different guidelines. Data were used from 130 GPs, working in 83 practices with 98,577 patients. GP-characteristics as well as guideline characteristics were used as independent variables. Measures include workload (number of contacts), hours spent on continuing medical education, satisfaction with available time, practice characteristics and patient characteristics. Outcome measure is an indicator score, which is 1 when a decision is in accordance with professional guidelines or 0 when the decision deviates from guidelines. RESULTS: On average, 66% of the decisions GPs made were in accordance with guidelines. No relationship was found between the objective workload of GPs and their adherence to guidelines. Subjective workload (measured on a five point scale) was negatively related to guideline adherence (OR = 0.95). After controlling for all other variables, the variation between GPs in adherence to guideline recommendations showed a range of less than 10%. 84% of the variation in guideline adherence was located at the GAI-level. Which means that the differences in adherence levels between guidelines are much larger than differences between GPs. Guideline recommendations that require an extra time investment during the same consultation are significantly less adhered to: (OR = 0.46), while those that can save time have much higher adherence levels: OR = 1.55). Recommendations that reduce the likelihood of a follow-up consultation for the same problem are also more often adhered to compared to those that have no influence on this (OR = 3.13). CONCLUSION: No significant relationship was found between the objective workload of GPs and adherence to guidelines. However, guideline recommendations that require an extra time investment are significantly less well adhered to while those that can save time are significantly more often adhered to.
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spelling pubmed-27917512009-12-11 Labour intensity of guidelines may have a greater effect on adherence than GPs' workload van den Berg, Michael J de Bakker, Dinny H Spreeuwenberg, Peter Westert, Gert P Braspenning, Jozé CC van der Zee, Jouke Groenewegen, Peter P BMC Fam Pract Research article BACKGROUND: Physicians' heavy workload is often thought to jeopardise the quality of care and to be a barrier to improving quality. The relationship between these has, however, rarely been investigated. In this study quality of care is defined as care 'in accordance with professional guidelines'. In this study we investigated whether GPs with a higher workload adhere less to guidelines than those with a lower workload and whether guideline recommendations that require a greater time investment are less adhered to than those that can save time. METHODS: Data were used from the Second Dutch National survey of General Practice (DNSGP-2). This nationwide study was carried out between April 2000 and January 2002. A multilevel logistic-regression analysis was conducted of 170,677 decisions made by GPs, referring to 41 Guideline Adherence Indicators (GAIs), which were derived from 32 different guidelines. Data were used from 130 GPs, working in 83 practices with 98,577 patients. GP-characteristics as well as guideline characteristics were used as independent variables. Measures include workload (number of contacts), hours spent on continuing medical education, satisfaction with available time, practice characteristics and patient characteristics. Outcome measure is an indicator score, which is 1 when a decision is in accordance with professional guidelines or 0 when the decision deviates from guidelines. RESULTS: On average, 66% of the decisions GPs made were in accordance with guidelines. No relationship was found between the objective workload of GPs and their adherence to guidelines. Subjective workload (measured on a five point scale) was negatively related to guideline adherence (OR = 0.95). After controlling for all other variables, the variation between GPs in adherence to guideline recommendations showed a range of less than 10%. 84% of the variation in guideline adherence was located at the GAI-level. Which means that the differences in adherence levels between guidelines are much larger than differences between GPs. Guideline recommendations that require an extra time investment during the same consultation are significantly less adhered to: (OR = 0.46), while those that can save time have much higher adherence levels: OR = 1.55). Recommendations that reduce the likelihood of a follow-up consultation for the same problem are also more often adhered to compared to those that have no influence on this (OR = 3.13). CONCLUSION: No significant relationship was found between the objective workload of GPs and adherence to guidelines. However, guideline recommendations that require an extra time investment are significantly less well adhered to while those that can save time are significantly more often adhered to. BioMed Central 2009-11-28 /pmc/articles/PMC2791751/ /pubmed/19943953 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2296-10-74 Text en Copyright ©2009 van den Berg et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research article
van den Berg, Michael J
de Bakker, Dinny H
Spreeuwenberg, Peter
Westert, Gert P
Braspenning, Jozé CC
van der Zee, Jouke
Groenewegen, Peter P
Labour intensity of guidelines may have a greater effect on adherence than GPs' workload
title Labour intensity of guidelines may have a greater effect on adherence than GPs' workload
title_full Labour intensity of guidelines may have a greater effect on adherence than GPs' workload
title_fullStr Labour intensity of guidelines may have a greater effect on adherence than GPs' workload
title_full_unstemmed Labour intensity of guidelines may have a greater effect on adherence than GPs' workload
title_short Labour intensity of guidelines may have a greater effect on adherence than GPs' workload
title_sort labour intensity of guidelines may have a greater effect on adherence than gps' workload
topic Research article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2791751/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19943953
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2296-10-74
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