A postal survey of data in general practice on the prevalence of Acquired Brain Injury (ABI) in patients aged 18–65 in one county in the west of Ireland

<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Very little is known about the prevalence of acquired brain injury (ABI) in Ireland. ABI prevalence has previously been obtained from Belgian general practitioners using a postal survey. We attempted to ascertain the prevalence of AB...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Dineen Brendan, Glynn Liam, Finnerty Fionnuala, Colfer Finbarr, MacFarlane Anne
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2009-05-01
Series:BMC Family Practice
Online Access:http://www.biomedcentral.com/1471-2296/10/36
_version_ 1811328162992226304
author Dineen Brendan
Glynn Liam
Finnerty Fionnuala
Colfer Finbarr
MacFarlane Anne
author_facet Dineen Brendan
Glynn Liam
Finnerty Fionnuala
Colfer Finbarr
MacFarlane Anne
author_sort Dineen Brendan
collection DOAJ
description <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Very little is known about the prevalence of acquired brain injury (ABI) in Ireland. ABI prevalence has previously been obtained from Belgian general practitioners using a postal survey. We attempted to ascertain the prevalence of ABI in County Mayo through a postal survey of all general practitioners in the county.</p> <p>The specific objectives of this project were to:</p> <p indent="1">1. identify whether general practitioners are</p> <p indent="2">a. aware of patients with ABI aged 18–65 in their practices</p> <p indent="2">b. able to provide prevalence data on ABI in patients aged 18–65</p> <p indent="2">c. able to provide data on age, gender and patient diagnosis</p> <p indent="1">2. analyse prevalence of ABI from any available data from general practitioners.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>A pilot postal survey was performed initially in order to assess the feasibility of the study. It was established that general practitioners did have the necessary information required to complete the questionnaire. A main postal survey was then undertaken. A postal questionnaire was administered to all general practices in County Mayo in the west of Ireland (n = 59). The response rate was 32.2% (n = 19).</p> <p>Results</p> <p>General practitioners who replied on behalf of their practice could provide data on patient age, gender and diagnosis. In the nineteen practices, there were 57 patients with ABI. The age-specific prevalence of ABI in the area surveyed was estimated at 183.7 per 100,000. The mean patient population per practice was 2,833 (SD = 950). There were found to be significantly more patients with ABI in rural areas than urban areas (p = 0.006). There were also significant differences in the ages of patients in the different ABI categories. Patients whose ABI was of traumatic origin were significantly younger than those patients with ABI of haemorrhagic origin (p = 0.002).</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>Although this is a small-scale study, we have ascertained that general practitioners do have data on patients with ABI. Also, <it>some </it>prevalence data now exist where none was available before. These can be used to form the basis of a more substantial programme of university/community partnership research which could provide medical and psychosocial benefits for people with ABI and their families.</p>
first_indexed 2024-04-13T15:20:26Z
format Article
id doaj.art-b5d0d3b3e638413386796fb875754e73
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 1471-2296
language English
last_indexed 2024-04-13T15:20:26Z
publishDate 2009-05-01
publisher BMC
record_format Article
series BMC Family Practice
spelling doaj.art-b5d0d3b3e638413386796fb875754e732022-12-22T02:41:41ZengBMCBMC Family Practice1471-22962009-05-011013610.1186/1471-2296-10-36A postal survey of data in general practice on the prevalence of Acquired Brain Injury (ABI) in patients aged 18–65 in one county in the west of IrelandDineen BrendanGlynn LiamFinnerty FionnualaColfer FinbarrMacFarlane Anne<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Very little is known about the prevalence of acquired brain injury (ABI) in Ireland. ABI prevalence has previously been obtained from Belgian general practitioners using a postal survey. We attempted to ascertain the prevalence of ABI in County Mayo through a postal survey of all general practitioners in the county.</p> <p>The specific objectives of this project were to:</p> <p indent="1">1. identify whether general practitioners are</p> <p indent="2">a. aware of patients with ABI aged 18–65 in their practices</p> <p indent="2">b. able to provide prevalence data on ABI in patients aged 18–65</p> <p indent="2">c. able to provide data on age, gender and patient diagnosis</p> <p indent="1">2. analyse prevalence of ABI from any available data from general practitioners.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>A pilot postal survey was performed initially in order to assess the feasibility of the study. It was established that general practitioners did have the necessary information required to complete the questionnaire. A main postal survey was then undertaken. A postal questionnaire was administered to all general practices in County Mayo in the west of Ireland (n = 59). The response rate was 32.2% (n = 19).</p> <p>Results</p> <p>General practitioners who replied on behalf of their practice could provide data on patient age, gender and diagnosis. In the nineteen practices, there were 57 patients with ABI. The age-specific prevalence of ABI in the area surveyed was estimated at 183.7 per 100,000. The mean patient population per practice was 2,833 (SD = 950). There were found to be significantly more patients with ABI in rural areas than urban areas (p = 0.006). There were also significant differences in the ages of patients in the different ABI categories. Patients whose ABI was of traumatic origin were significantly younger than those patients with ABI of haemorrhagic origin (p = 0.002).</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>Although this is a small-scale study, we have ascertained that general practitioners do have data on patients with ABI. Also, <it>some </it>prevalence data now exist where none was available before. These can be used to form the basis of a more substantial programme of university/community partnership research which could provide medical and psychosocial benefits for people with ABI and their families.</p>http://www.biomedcentral.com/1471-2296/10/36
spellingShingle Dineen Brendan
Glynn Liam
Finnerty Fionnuala
Colfer Finbarr
MacFarlane Anne
A postal survey of data in general practice on the prevalence of Acquired Brain Injury (ABI) in patients aged 18–65 in one county in the west of Ireland
BMC Family Practice
title A postal survey of data in general practice on the prevalence of Acquired Brain Injury (ABI) in patients aged 18–65 in one county in the west of Ireland
title_full A postal survey of data in general practice on the prevalence of Acquired Brain Injury (ABI) in patients aged 18–65 in one county in the west of Ireland
title_fullStr A postal survey of data in general practice on the prevalence of Acquired Brain Injury (ABI) in patients aged 18–65 in one county in the west of Ireland
title_full_unstemmed A postal survey of data in general practice on the prevalence of Acquired Brain Injury (ABI) in patients aged 18–65 in one county in the west of Ireland
title_short A postal survey of data in general practice on the prevalence of Acquired Brain Injury (ABI) in patients aged 18–65 in one county in the west of Ireland
title_sort postal survey of data in general practice on the prevalence of acquired brain injury abi in patients aged 18 65 in one county in the west of ireland
url http://www.biomedcentral.com/1471-2296/10/36
work_keys_str_mv AT dineenbrendan apostalsurveyofdataingeneralpracticeontheprevalenceofacquiredbraininjuryabiinpatientsaged1865inonecountyinthewestofireland
AT glynnliam apostalsurveyofdataingeneralpracticeontheprevalenceofacquiredbraininjuryabiinpatientsaged1865inonecountyinthewestofireland
AT finnertyfionnuala apostalsurveyofdataingeneralpracticeontheprevalenceofacquiredbraininjuryabiinpatientsaged1865inonecountyinthewestofireland
AT colferfinbarr apostalsurveyofdataingeneralpracticeontheprevalenceofacquiredbraininjuryabiinpatientsaged1865inonecountyinthewestofireland
AT macfarlaneanne apostalsurveyofdataingeneralpracticeontheprevalenceofacquiredbraininjuryabiinpatientsaged1865inonecountyinthewestofireland
AT dineenbrendan postalsurveyofdataingeneralpracticeontheprevalenceofacquiredbraininjuryabiinpatientsaged1865inonecountyinthewestofireland
AT glynnliam postalsurveyofdataingeneralpracticeontheprevalenceofacquiredbraininjuryabiinpatientsaged1865inonecountyinthewestofireland
AT finnertyfionnuala postalsurveyofdataingeneralpracticeontheprevalenceofacquiredbraininjuryabiinpatientsaged1865inonecountyinthewestofireland
AT colferfinbarr postalsurveyofdataingeneralpracticeontheprevalenceofacquiredbraininjuryabiinpatientsaged1865inonecountyinthewestofireland
AT macfarlaneanne postalsurveyofdataingeneralpracticeontheprevalenceofacquiredbraininjuryabiinpatientsaged1865inonecountyinthewestofireland