Are patient views about antibiotics related to clinician perceptions, management and outcome? A multi-country study in outpatients with acute cough

Background Outpatients with acute cough who expect, hope for or ask for antibiotics may be more unwell, benefit more from antibiotic treatment, and be more satisfied with care when they are prescribed antibiotics. Clinicians may not accurately identify those patients. Objective To explore whether pa...

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Main Authors: Coenen, S, Francis, N, Kelly, M, Hood, K, Nuttall, J, Little, P, Verheij, T, Melbye, H, Goossens, H, Butler, C
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science 2013
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author Coenen, S
Francis, N
Kelly, M
Hood, K
Nuttall, J
Little, P
Verheij, T
Melbye, H
Goossens, H
Butler, C
author_facet Coenen, S
Francis, N
Kelly, M
Hood, K
Nuttall, J
Little, P
Verheij, T
Melbye, H
Goossens, H
Butler, C
author_sort Coenen, S
collection OXFORD
description Background Outpatients with acute cough who expect, hope for or ask for antibiotics may be more unwell, benefit more from antibiotic treatment, and be more satisfied with care when they are prescribed antibiotics. Clinicians may not accurately identify those patients. Objective To explore whether patient views (expecting, hoping for or asking for antibiotics) are associated with illness presentation and resolution, whether patient views are accurately perceived by clinicians, and the association of all these factors with antibiotic prescribing and patient satisfaction with care. Methods Prospective observational study of 3402 adult patients with acute cough presenting in 14 primary care networks. Correlations and associations tested with multilevel logistic regression and McNemar ‘s tests, and Cohen’s Kappa, positive agreement (PA) and negative agreement (NA) calculated as appropriate. Results 1,213 (45.1%) patients expected, 1,093 (40.6%) hoped for, and 275 (10.2%) asked for antibiotics. Clinicians perceived 840 (31.3%) as wanting to be prescribed antibiotics (McNemar’s test, p<0.05). Their perception agreed modestly with the three patient views (Kappa’s = 0.29, 0.32 and 0.21, PA’s = 0.56, 0.56 and 0.33, NA’s = 0.72, 0.75 and 0.82, respectively). 1,464 (54.4%) patients were prescribed antibiotics. Illness presentation and resolution were similar for patients regardless their views. These associations were not modified by antibiotic treatment. Patient expectation and hope (OR:2.08, 95% CI:[1.48,2.93] and 2.48 [1.73,3.55], respectively), and clinician perception (12.18 [8.31,17.84]) were associated with antibiotic prescribing. 2,354 (92.6%) patients were satisfied. Only those hoping for antibiotics were less satisfied when antibiotics were not prescribed (0.39 [0.17,0.90]). Conclusion Patient views about antibiotic treatment were not useful for identifying those who will benefit from antibiotics. Clinician perceptions did not match with patient views, but particularly influenced antibiotic prescribing. Patients were generally satisfied with care, but those hoping for but not prescribed antibiotics were less satisfied. Clinicians need to more effectively elicit and address patient views about antibiotics.
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spelling oxford-uuid:78ad73b1-0d1e-41d4-a200-a4f51efb25452022-03-26T20:32:20ZAre patient views about antibiotics related to clinician perceptions, management and outcome? A multi-country study in outpatients with acute coughJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:78ad73b1-0d1e-41d4-a200-a4f51efb2545EnglishSymplectic Elements at OxfordPublic Library of Science2013Coenen, SFrancis, NKelly, MHood, KNuttall, JLittle, PVerheij, TMelbye, HGoossens, HButler, CBackground Outpatients with acute cough who expect, hope for or ask for antibiotics may be more unwell, benefit more from antibiotic treatment, and be more satisfied with care when they are prescribed antibiotics. Clinicians may not accurately identify those patients. Objective To explore whether patient views (expecting, hoping for or asking for antibiotics) are associated with illness presentation and resolution, whether patient views are accurately perceived by clinicians, and the association of all these factors with antibiotic prescribing and patient satisfaction with care. Methods Prospective observational study of 3402 adult patients with acute cough presenting in 14 primary care networks. Correlations and associations tested with multilevel logistic regression and McNemar ‘s tests, and Cohen’s Kappa, positive agreement (PA) and negative agreement (NA) calculated as appropriate. Results 1,213 (45.1%) patients expected, 1,093 (40.6%) hoped for, and 275 (10.2%) asked for antibiotics. Clinicians perceived 840 (31.3%) as wanting to be prescribed antibiotics (McNemar’s test, p<0.05). Their perception agreed modestly with the three patient views (Kappa’s = 0.29, 0.32 and 0.21, PA’s = 0.56, 0.56 and 0.33, NA’s = 0.72, 0.75 and 0.82, respectively). 1,464 (54.4%) patients were prescribed antibiotics. Illness presentation and resolution were similar for patients regardless their views. These associations were not modified by antibiotic treatment. Patient expectation and hope (OR:2.08, 95% CI:[1.48,2.93] and 2.48 [1.73,3.55], respectively), and clinician perception (12.18 [8.31,17.84]) were associated with antibiotic prescribing. 2,354 (92.6%) patients were satisfied. Only those hoping for antibiotics were less satisfied when antibiotics were not prescribed (0.39 [0.17,0.90]). Conclusion Patient views about antibiotic treatment were not useful for identifying those who will benefit from antibiotics. Clinician perceptions did not match with patient views, but particularly influenced antibiotic prescribing. Patients were generally satisfied with care, but those hoping for but not prescribed antibiotics were less satisfied. Clinicians need to more effectively elicit and address patient views about antibiotics.
spellingShingle Coenen, S
Francis, N
Kelly, M
Hood, K
Nuttall, J
Little, P
Verheij, T
Melbye, H
Goossens, H
Butler, C
Are patient views about antibiotics related to clinician perceptions, management and outcome? A multi-country study in outpatients with acute cough
title Are patient views about antibiotics related to clinician perceptions, management and outcome? A multi-country study in outpatients with acute cough
title_full Are patient views about antibiotics related to clinician perceptions, management and outcome? A multi-country study in outpatients with acute cough
title_fullStr Are patient views about antibiotics related to clinician perceptions, management and outcome? A multi-country study in outpatients with acute cough
title_full_unstemmed Are patient views about antibiotics related to clinician perceptions, management and outcome? A multi-country study in outpatients with acute cough
title_short Are patient views about antibiotics related to clinician perceptions, management and outcome? A multi-country study in outpatients with acute cough
title_sort are patient views about antibiotics related to clinician perceptions management and outcome a multi country study in outpatients with acute cough
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