Cargando…

Internal Medicine Residents’ Knowledge and Practice of Pulmonary Tuberculosis Diagnosis

BACKGROUND: Internal medicine physicians are often the first providers to encounter patients with a new diagnosis of tuberculosis. Given the public health risks of missed tuberculosis cases, assessing internal medicine residents’ ability to diagnose tuberculosis is important. METHODS: Internal medic...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Chida, Natasha, Brown, Christopher, Mathad, Jyoti, Carpenter, Kelly, Nelson, George, Schechter, Marcos C, Giles, Natalie, Rebolledo, Paulina A, Ray, Susan, Fabre, Valeria, Cantillo, Diana Silva, Longworth, Sarah, Amorosa, Valerianna, Petrauskis, Christian, Boulanger, Catherine, Cain, Natalie, Gupta, Amita, McKenzie-White, Jane, Bollinger, Robert, Melia, Michael T
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6054198/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30046640
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ofid/ofy152
_version_ 1783340969638232064
author Chida, Natasha
Brown, Christopher
Mathad, Jyoti
Carpenter, Kelly
Nelson, George
Schechter, Marcos C
Giles, Natalie
Rebolledo, Paulina A
Ray, Susan
Fabre, Valeria
Cantillo, Diana Silva
Longworth, Sarah
Amorosa, Valerianna
Petrauskis, Christian
Boulanger, Catherine
Cain, Natalie
Gupta, Amita
McKenzie-White, Jane
Bollinger, Robert
Melia, Michael T
author_facet Chida, Natasha
Brown, Christopher
Mathad, Jyoti
Carpenter, Kelly
Nelson, George
Schechter, Marcos C
Giles, Natalie
Rebolledo, Paulina A
Ray, Susan
Fabre, Valeria
Cantillo, Diana Silva
Longworth, Sarah
Amorosa, Valerianna
Petrauskis, Christian
Boulanger, Catherine
Cain, Natalie
Gupta, Amita
McKenzie-White, Jane
Bollinger, Robert
Melia, Michael T
author_sort Chida, Natasha
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Internal medicine physicians are often the first providers to encounter patients with a new diagnosis of tuberculosis. Given the public health risks of missed tuberculosis cases, assessing internal medicine residents’ ability to diagnose tuberculosis is important. METHODS: Internal medicine resident knowledge and practice patterns in pulmonary tuberculosis diagnosis at 7 academic hospitals were assessed utilizing (a) a 10-item validated pulmonary tuberculosis diagnosis assessment tool and (b) a retrospective chart review of 343 patients who underwent a pulmonary tuberculosis evaluation while admitted to a resident-staffed internal medicine or infectious disease service. Our primary outcomes were the mean score and percentage of correct responses per assessment tool question, and the percentage of patients who had Centers for Disease Control and Prevention–recommended tuberculosis diagnostic tests obtained. RESULTS: Of the 886 residents who received the assessment, 541 responded, yielding a response rate of 61%. The mean score on the assessment tool (SD) was 4.4 (1.6), and the correct response rate was 57% (311/541) or less on 9 of 10 questions. On chart review, each recommended test was obtained for ≤43% (148/343) of patients, other than chest x-ray (328/343; 96%). A nucleic acid amplification test was obtained for 18% (62/343) of patients, whereas 24% (83/343) had only 1 respiratory sample obtained. Twenty patients were diagnosed with tuberculosis. CONCLUSIONS: Significant knowledge and practice gaps exist in internal medicine residents’ abilities to diagnose tuberculosis. As residents represent the future providers who will be evaluating patients with possible tuberculosis, such deficiencies must be addressed.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-6054198
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2018
publisher Oxford University Press
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-60541982018-07-25 Internal Medicine Residents’ Knowledge and Practice of Pulmonary Tuberculosis Diagnosis Chida, Natasha Brown, Christopher Mathad, Jyoti Carpenter, Kelly Nelson, George Schechter, Marcos C Giles, Natalie Rebolledo, Paulina A Ray, Susan Fabre, Valeria Cantillo, Diana Silva Longworth, Sarah Amorosa, Valerianna Petrauskis, Christian Boulanger, Catherine Cain, Natalie Gupta, Amita McKenzie-White, Jane Bollinger, Robert Melia, Michael T Open Forum Infect Dis Major Article BACKGROUND: Internal medicine physicians are often the first providers to encounter patients with a new diagnosis of tuberculosis. Given the public health risks of missed tuberculosis cases, assessing internal medicine residents’ ability to diagnose tuberculosis is important. METHODS: Internal medicine resident knowledge and practice patterns in pulmonary tuberculosis diagnosis at 7 academic hospitals were assessed utilizing (a) a 10-item validated pulmonary tuberculosis diagnosis assessment tool and (b) a retrospective chart review of 343 patients who underwent a pulmonary tuberculosis evaluation while admitted to a resident-staffed internal medicine or infectious disease service. Our primary outcomes were the mean score and percentage of correct responses per assessment tool question, and the percentage of patients who had Centers for Disease Control and Prevention–recommended tuberculosis diagnostic tests obtained. RESULTS: Of the 886 residents who received the assessment, 541 responded, yielding a response rate of 61%. The mean score on the assessment tool (SD) was 4.4 (1.6), and the correct response rate was 57% (311/541) or less on 9 of 10 questions. On chart review, each recommended test was obtained for ≤43% (148/343) of patients, other than chest x-ray (328/343; 96%). A nucleic acid amplification test was obtained for 18% (62/343) of patients, whereas 24% (83/343) had only 1 respiratory sample obtained. Twenty patients were diagnosed with tuberculosis. CONCLUSIONS: Significant knowledge and practice gaps exist in internal medicine residents’ abilities to diagnose tuberculosis. As residents represent the future providers who will be evaluating patients with possible tuberculosis, such deficiencies must be addressed. Oxford University Press 2018-06-27 /pmc/articles/PMC6054198/ /pubmed/30046640 http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ofid/ofy152 Text en © The Author(s) 2018. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of Infectious Diseases Society of America. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/), which permits non-commercial reproduction and distribution of the work, in any medium, provided the original work is not altered or transformed in any way, and that the work is properly cited. For commercial re-use, please contact journals.permissions@oup.com
spellingShingle Major Article
Chida, Natasha
Brown, Christopher
Mathad, Jyoti
Carpenter, Kelly
Nelson, George
Schechter, Marcos C
Giles, Natalie
Rebolledo, Paulina A
Ray, Susan
Fabre, Valeria
Cantillo, Diana Silva
Longworth, Sarah
Amorosa, Valerianna
Petrauskis, Christian
Boulanger, Catherine
Cain, Natalie
Gupta, Amita
McKenzie-White, Jane
Bollinger, Robert
Melia, Michael T
Internal Medicine Residents’ Knowledge and Practice of Pulmonary Tuberculosis Diagnosis
title Internal Medicine Residents’ Knowledge and Practice of Pulmonary Tuberculosis Diagnosis
title_full Internal Medicine Residents’ Knowledge and Practice of Pulmonary Tuberculosis Diagnosis
title_fullStr Internal Medicine Residents’ Knowledge and Practice of Pulmonary Tuberculosis Diagnosis
title_full_unstemmed Internal Medicine Residents’ Knowledge and Practice of Pulmonary Tuberculosis Diagnosis
title_short Internal Medicine Residents’ Knowledge and Practice of Pulmonary Tuberculosis Diagnosis
title_sort internal medicine residents’ knowledge and practice of pulmonary tuberculosis diagnosis
topic Major Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6054198/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30046640
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ofid/ofy152
work_keys_str_mv AT chidanatasha internalmedicineresidentsknowledgeandpracticeofpulmonarytuberculosisdiagnosis
AT brownchristopher internalmedicineresidentsknowledgeandpracticeofpulmonarytuberculosisdiagnosis
AT mathadjyoti internalmedicineresidentsknowledgeandpracticeofpulmonarytuberculosisdiagnosis
AT carpenterkelly internalmedicineresidentsknowledgeandpracticeofpulmonarytuberculosisdiagnosis
AT nelsongeorge internalmedicineresidentsknowledgeandpracticeofpulmonarytuberculosisdiagnosis
AT schechtermarcosc internalmedicineresidentsknowledgeandpracticeofpulmonarytuberculosisdiagnosis
AT gilesnatalie internalmedicineresidentsknowledgeandpracticeofpulmonarytuberculosisdiagnosis
AT rebolledopaulinaa internalmedicineresidentsknowledgeandpracticeofpulmonarytuberculosisdiagnosis
AT raysusan internalmedicineresidentsknowledgeandpracticeofpulmonarytuberculosisdiagnosis
AT fabrevaleria internalmedicineresidentsknowledgeandpracticeofpulmonarytuberculosisdiagnosis
AT cantillodianasilva internalmedicineresidentsknowledgeandpracticeofpulmonarytuberculosisdiagnosis
AT longworthsarah internalmedicineresidentsknowledgeandpracticeofpulmonarytuberculosisdiagnosis
AT amorosavalerianna internalmedicineresidentsknowledgeandpracticeofpulmonarytuberculosisdiagnosis
AT petrauskischristian internalmedicineresidentsknowledgeandpracticeofpulmonarytuberculosisdiagnosis
AT boulangercatherine internalmedicineresidentsknowledgeandpracticeofpulmonarytuberculosisdiagnosis
AT cainnatalie internalmedicineresidentsknowledgeandpracticeofpulmonarytuberculosisdiagnosis
AT guptaamita internalmedicineresidentsknowledgeandpracticeofpulmonarytuberculosisdiagnosis
AT mckenziewhitejane internalmedicineresidentsknowledgeandpracticeofpulmonarytuberculosisdiagnosis
AT bollingerrobert internalmedicineresidentsknowledgeandpracticeofpulmonarytuberculosisdiagnosis
AT meliamichaelt internalmedicineresidentsknowledgeandpracticeofpulmonarytuberculosisdiagnosis