17 results on '"Steinhäuser, Jost"'
Search Results
2. Seminar program for postgraduate specialty training in general practice: proposal for a 5-year thematic catalogue
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Sommer, Susanne, Baum, Erika, Magez, Julia, Chenot, Jean-Francois, Weckmann, Gesine, Steinhäuser, Jost, Heim, Susanne, Schneider, Dagmar, and Fuchs, Stephan
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primary care ,rotation network program ,post graduate trainees ,tutorial ,learning ,content ,Special aspects of education ,LC8-6691 ,Medicine - Abstract
Introduction: In different German regions, seminar programs have been conducted for General practice residents. In each region, selection and teaching of learning content is conducted in a different manner. So far, no structured, standardized curriculum has been implemented nationwide. We have investigated, if the development of a common 5-year program of learning topics is conceivable between the different university departments of General practice in Germany.Method: The seminar program working group of the DEGAM (German College of General Practitioners and Family Physicians) has conducted an online survey based on information gathered via preliminary telephone conference (n=7; physicians with postgraduate teaching experience) among all German university departments of General Practice and two non-university teaching institutions, identified via the internet. 884 topics were extracted from 14 Seminar programs. The topics were entered in a database, discussed and categorized: Practice management/practice work flow/standardized documentation forms/quality management (n=33 topics), common acute and chronic diseases, including disease management programs (n=29 topics), communication, neurological, psychological and psychiatric consultations (n=24 topics), common medical problems, including eye, ear, nose, throat, skin and pediatric problems (n=99 Topics) family physicians general approach, including epidemiology, shared decision making, test of time (n=42 Topics). These topics have been rated for priority and desirable number of teaching-units.Results: A catalogue of 111 topics was designed, encompassing 160 teaching units. There is a suggestion of wide topics collections plus an add-on catalogue.Conclusion: A proposal for a 5-year-thematic catalogue for postgraduate training of general practice residents in Germany has been developed. This newly developed curriculum has the potential to improve knowledge and skills that have not been covered during in-house and ambulatory general practice residencies.
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- 2017
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3. The ambulatory care of patients with post-acute sequelae of COVID-19
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Strumann, Christoph, von Meißner, Wolfgang C. G., Blickle, Paul-Georg, and Steinhäuser, Jost
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- 2023
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4. The use of routine data from primary care practices in Germany to analyze the impact of the outbreak of SARS-CoV-2 on the utilization of primary care services for patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus
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Strumann, Christoph, Blickle, Paul-Georg, von Meißner, Wolfgang C. G., and Steinhäuser, Jost
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- 2022
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5. Facilitators and barriers for the implementation of telemedicine from a local government point of view - a cross-sectional survey in Germany
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Weißenfeld, Maja Maria, Goetz, Katja, and Steinhäuser, Jost
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- 2021
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6. Telemedizin in der Hausarztpraxis — Aspekte der Kommunikation
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Waschkau, Alexander, Allner, Raphael, Fischer, Stefan, and Steinhäuser, Jost
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- 2018
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7. DEGAM-Verbundweiterbildungplus: Etablierung einer gemeinsamen Sprache
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Flum, Elisabeth, Marx, Irmgard, Schwill, Simon, Schneider, Dagmar, Szecsenyi, Joachim, and Steinhäuser, Jost
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- 2017
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8. Factors influencing defensive medicine‐based decision‐making in primary care: A scoping review.
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Strobel, Christina J., Oldenburg, Dorothee, and Steinhäuser, Jost
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OCCUPATIONAL roles ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,PRIMARY health care ,MALPRACTICE ,DRUG prescribing ,SEARCH engines ,OVERDIAGNOSIS ,RESEARCH funding ,DECISION making in clinical medicine ,MEDICAL prescriptions ,PHYSICIAN practice patterns ,LITERATURE reviews ,MEDLINE ,PHYSICIANS - Abstract
Rationale, Aims and Objectives: Medical decision‐making processes in primary care are influenced by defensive medical practice. This involves a high possibility for negative consequences on many levels, for example, patient's health, health care system costs and a crisis of trust in the patient−doctor relationship. Aim of this review was to identify factors of defensive medicine‐based decision‐making in primary care. Methods: This scoping review was conducted in accordance with the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta‐Analyses extension for Scoping reviews (PRISMA‐ScR) guidelines and included systematic research on MEDLINE, Google Scholar and two German databases for additional grey literature. References provided further literature. Articles in English and German published from 1 January 1982 to 15 June 2022 were assessed. Results: From 911 publications screened, 13 publications [6 qualitative studies and 7 quantitative (3 cross‐sectional) studies] were included. In these, four main categories of factors influencing defensive medical practice were identified: (social) media, patients adopting a consumer attitude, health care system based working conditions and physician's tolerance for uncertainty. Pressure deriving from these four different sources is exerted on the general practitioner and may result in a defensive medical decision behaviour. Conclusions: Four categories on influencing factors of defensive medicine could be identified. Strategies to tolerate uncertainty should be trained in under‐ and postgraduate training. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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9. Weiterentwicklung des Kompetenzbasierten Curriculums Allgemeinmedizin: Ergebnisse aus dem Praxistest
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Flum, Elisabeth, Roos, Marco, Jäger, Cornelia, Chenot, Jean-François, Magez, Julia, and Steinhäuser, Jost
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- 2015
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10. Vaccination management for elderly patients in primary care settings – documentation and responsibilities during a vaccination campaign
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Weinmayr, Lisa-Marie, Steinhäuser, Jost, Gehring, Svante Christoph, and Goetz, Katja
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primary care ,pneumococcal vaccine ,vaccination ,influenza ,Original Research ,quality improvement - Abstract
Objective The aims of the current analysis were to evaluate the vaccination status and attitudes towards vaccinations of elderly patients and to explore effects of a vaccination campaign. Methods The data were raised in primary care settings by a physicians network which collected data during routine care from 697 patients and by the analysis of health insurance claims data from the Kassenärztliche Vereinigung Schleswig-Holstein (KVSH/Association of Statutory Health Insurance Physicians of the federal state of Schleswig-Holstein, Germany), regarding vaccinations in the participating practices before and after a vaccination campaign. Results Vaccination documentation for tetanus (57.7%), diphtheria (55.7%) and influenza (55.8%) was available for slightly more than half of the study sample. A lower documentation rate was observed for pertussis (33.1%), pneumococcal vaccination (30.3%) and polio (26.3%). Practice assistants were more responsible for determining the vaccination status than physicians. The attitude regarding influenza and pneumococcal vaccine was positive in 72.9% and 56.9% of patients respectively. After the campaign, rates of influenza and pneumococcal vaccine utilization increased by 13.4% and 62.9%, respectively. Conclusions Attitudes regarding vaccination were generally positive. Documentation was missing for almost half of the elderly population. The delegation of vaccine management to practice assistants could increase the immunization rate. Moreover, it can be assumed that a campaign might be helpful in increasing vaccination awareness and vaccine coverage.
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- 2019
11. Diagnostic performance of deep-learning-based screening methods for diabetic retinopathy in primary care—A meta-analysis.
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Wewetzer, Larisa, Held, Linda A., and Steinhäuser, Jost
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PRIMARY care ,TYPE 1 diabetes ,DIABETIC retinopathy ,TYPE 2 diabetes ,DEEP learning - Abstract
Background: Diabetic retinopathy (DR) affects 10–24% of patients with diabetes mellitus type 1 or 2 in the primary care (PC) sector. As early detection is crucial for treatment, deep learning screening methods in PC setting could potentially aid in an accurate and timely diagnosis. Purpose: The purpose of this meta-analysis was to determine the current state of knowledge regarding deep learning (DL) screening methods for DR in PC. Data sources: A systematic literature search was conducted using Medline, Web of Science, and Scopus to identify suitable studies. Study selection: Suitable studies were selected by two researchers independently. Studies assessing DL methods and the suitability of these screening systems (diagnostic parameters such as sensitivity and specificity, information on datasets and setting) in PC were selected. Excluded were studies focusing on lesions, applying conventional diagnostic imaging tools, conducted in secondary or tertiary care, and all publication types other than original research studies on human subjects. Data extraction: The following data was extracted from included studies: authors, title, year of publication, objectives, participants, setting, type of intervention/method, reference standard, grading scale, outcome measures, dataset, risk of bias, and performance measures. Data synthesis and conclusion: The summed sensitivity of all included studies was 87% and specificity was 90%. Given a prevalence of DR of 10% in patients with DM Type 2 in PC, the negative predictive value is 98% while the positive predictive value is 49%. Limitations: Selected studies showed a high variation in sample size and quality and quantity of available data. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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12. German healthcare professionals' perspective on implementing recommendations about polypharmacy in general practice: a qualitative study.
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Straßner, Cornelia, Steinhäuser, Jost, Freund, Tobias, Szecsenyi, Joachim, Wensing, Michel, Straßner, Cornelia, and Steinhäuser, Jost
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MEDICAL care , *PRIMARY care , *POLYPHARMACY , *PHARMACISTS , *COMMUNICATION , *ATTITUDE (Psychology) , *CHRONIC diseases , *COMPARATIVE studies , *COUNSELING , *FAMILY medicine , *FOCUS groups , *HEALTH planning , *INTERVIEWING , *RESEARCH methodology , *MEDICAL cooperation , *MEDICAL protocols , *GENERAL practitioners , *RESEARCH , *QUALITATIVE research , *PSYCHOSOCIAL factors , *EVALUATION research , *ACQUISITION of data - Abstract
Background: Key recommendations for the management of patients with polypharmacy are structured medication counselling (SMC), medication lists and systematic medication reviews.Objective: The aim of this study was to identify determinants (hindering and facilitating factors) for the implementation of the recommendations in general practice.Methods: This study was linked to a tailored intervention aimed at improving the implementation of the recommendations in German general practice. Interviews and focus groups with different healthcare professionals were carried out in the design phase and after delivery of the intervention. The material from both data collections was analysed separately in a content analytical approach resulting in two sets of categories. For this study, the subcategories of both sets were assigned to the Tailoring Interventions for Chronic Diseases (TICD) checklist, a comprehensive framework of determinants of practice.Results: Interviews with 24 general practitioners (GPs), 4 other medical specialists, 1 pharmacist, 3 nurses and 6 medical assistants as well as 2 mixed focus groups with 17 professionals were conducted. We identified 93 determinants: 29 referred to medication counselling, 21 to the use of medication lists, 20 to medications reviews and 23 to all recommendations. The determinants were related to all 7 main domains and to 25 of the 57 subdomains on the TICD checklist including guideline factors, patient factors, individual healthcare professional factors, social, political and legal factors, incentives and resources, and capacity for organizational change.Conclusion: While many interventions to improve polypharmacy focus on the provision of pharmacological knowledge, a much wider range of domains need to be addressed, such as communication skills, patient involvement and practice organization. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2018
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13. Operations research meets need related planning: Approaches for locating general practitioners’ practices.
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Reuter-Oppermann, Melanie, Nickel, Stefan, and Steinhäuser, Jost
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GENERAL practitioners ,MEDICAL care ,HEALTH planning ,INFORMATION science ,LOGISTICS - Abstract
Background: In most western countries a shortage of general practitioners (GP) exists. Newly qualified GPs often prefer to work in teams rather than in single-handed practices. Therefore, new practices offering these kinds of working conditions will be attractive in the future. From a health care point of view, the location planning of new practices will be a crucial aspect. In this work we studied solutions for locating GP practices in a defined administrative district under different objectives. Methods: Using operations research (OR), a research discipline that originated from logistics, different possible locations of GP practices were identified for the considered district. Models were developed under two main basic requirements: that one practice can be reached by as many inhabitants as possible and to cut down the driving time for every district’s inhabitant to the next practice location to less than 15 minutes. Input data included the demand (population), driving times and the current GP locations. Results: Three different models were analysed ranging from one single practice solution to five different practices. The whole administrative district can reach the central community “A” in at most 23 minutes by car. Considering a maximum driving time of 15 minutes, locations in four different cities in the district would be sufficient. Conclusion: Operations research methods can be used to determine locations for (new) GP practices. Depending on the concrete problem different models and approaches lead to varying solutions. These results must be discussed with GPs, mayors and patients to find robust locations regarding future developments. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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14. Psychometric properties of the Arabic version of the EUROPEP questionnaire.
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Goetz, Katja, Hahn, Karolin, and Steinhäuser, Jost
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PRIMARY care ,MEDICAL care ,REFUGEES ,ARABIC language ,PATIENT satisfaction - Abstract
Background: The evaluation of quality of primary health care from the perspective of refugees is very underdeveloped. It depends mainly on the availability of instruments in the language of the refugees. The aim of this study was to translate, culturally adapt, and examine the psychometric properties especially the internal consistency and convergent construct validity of the Arabic version of the European Project on Patient Evaluation of General Practice Care (EUROPEP) questionnaire. Methods: The German version of the EUROPEP questionnaire was translated into Arabic language. In total, 619 Arabic-speaking people were invited to participate in this study. Refugees who lived in collective living quarters in the German federal state of Schleswig-Holstein were recruited. The EUROPEP questionnaire is a multidimensional instrument that comprises 23 items, each with a 5-point Likert-type response. Cronbach's alpha, descriptive statistics, and principal component analysis were used to assess a part of psychometric properties. Convergent construct validity was assessed with the validated questionnaire on satisfaction with ambulatory care – quality from the patient perspective (ZAP questionnaire) by using Spearman rank-order correlation test. Results: A total of 136 questionnaires of refugees were returned (response rate 22%). Of these respondents, 95 participants who had visited a general practitioner were included in the validation study. The exploratory factor analysis extracted four factors, namely, "medical care," "physician–patient relationship," "coordination of care," and "accessibility to care." The internal consistency ranged between α=0.942 for "medical care" and α=0.869 for "coordination of care." The convergent construct validity is supported by a significant positive correlation between the overall score of the EUROPEP questionnaire and the overall score of the ZAP questionnaire (rrho=0.820; p<0.01). Conclusion: The Arabic version of the EUROPEP questionnaire shows appropriate internal consistency and convergent construct validity. The availability of this instrument in Arabic language encourages further research in the field of outcome quality from refugees' perspective in other health service research projects. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2018
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15. A tailored programme to implement recommendations for multimorbid patients with polypharmacy in primary care practices-process evaluation of a cluster randomized trial.
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Jäger, Cornelia, Steinhäuser, Jost, Freund, Tobias, Kuse, Sarah, Szecsenyi, Joachim, and Wensing, Michel
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POLYPHARMACY , *COMORBIDITY , *PRIMARY care , *CLUSTER randomized controlled trials , *CONTROL groups - Abstract
Background: We developed and evaluated a tailored programme to implement three evidence-based recommendations for multimorbid patients with polypharmacy into primary care practices: structured medication counselling including brown bag reviews, the use of medication lists and medication reviews. No effect on the primary outcome was found. This process evaluation aimed to identify factors associated with outcomes by exploring nine hypotheses specified in the logic model of the tailored programme.Methods: The tailored programme was developed with respect to identified determinants of practice and consisted of a workshop for practice teams, elaboration of implementation action plans, aids for medication reviews, a multilingual info-tool for patients on a tablet PC, posters and brown paper bags as reminders for patients. The tailored programme was evaluated in a cluster randomized trial. The process evaluation was based on various data sources: interviews with general practitioners and medical assistants of the intervention group and a survey with general practitioners of the intervention and control group, written reports on the implementation action plans, documentation forms for structured medication counselling and the log file of the info-tool.Results: We analyzed 12 interviews, 21 questionnaires, 120 documentation forms for medication counselling, 5 implementation action plans and one log file of the info-tool. The most frequently reported effect of the tailored programme was the increase of awareness for the health problem and the recommendations, while implementation of routine processes was only reported for structured medication counselling. The survey largely confirmed the usefulness of the applied strategies, yet the interviews provided a more detailed understanding of the actual use of the strategies and several suggestions for modifications of the tailored programme.Conclusions: The tailored programme seemed to have induced awareness as a first step of behaviour change. Several modifications of the tailored programme may enhance its effectiveness such as conducting outreach visits instead of a workshop, improved targeting, provision of evidence, integration of tools into the practice software and information materials in tailored formats.Trial Registration: This study is linked to an outcome evaluation study with the registration ISRCTN34664024 , assigned 14/08/2013. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2017
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16. Tailored Implementation of Evidence-Based Practice for Patients with Chronic Diseases.
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Wensing, Michel, Huntink, Elke, van Lieshout, Jan, Godycki-Cwirko, Maciek, Kowalczyk, Anna, Jäger, Cornelia, Steinhäuser, Jost, Aakhus, Eivind, Flottorp, Signe, Eccles, Martin, and Baker, Richard
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CHRONICALLY ill ,CHRONIC disease treatment ,MEDICAL care ,MEDICAL personnel ,LUNG diseases ,CARDIOVASCULAR diseases ,MENTAL depression - Abstract
Background: When designing interventions and policies to implement evidence based healthcare, tailoring strategies to the targeted individuals and organizations has been recommended. We aimed to gather insights into the ideas of a variety of people for implementing evidence-based practice for patients with chronic diseases, which were generated in five European countries. Methods: A qualitative study in five countries (Germany, Netherlands, Norway, Poland, United Kingdom) was done, involving overall 115 individuals. A purposeful sample of four categories of stakeholders (healthcare professionals, quality improvement officers, healthcare purchasers and authorities, and health researchers) was involved in group interviews in each of the countries to generate items for improving healthcare in different chronic conditions per country: chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, cardiovascular disease, depression in elderly people, multi-morbidity, obesity. A disease-specific standardized list of determinants of practice in these conditions provided the starting point for these groups. The content of the suggested items was categorized in a pre-defined framework of 7 domains and specific themes in the items were identified within each domain. Results: The 115 individuals involved in the study generated 812 items, of which 586 addressed determinants of practice. These largely mapped onto three domains: individual health professional factors, patient factors, and professional interactions. Few items addressed guideline factors, incentives and resources, capacity of organizational change, or social, political and legal factors. The relative numbers of items in the different domains were largely similar across stakeholder categories within each of the countries. The analysis identified 29 specific themes in the suggested items across countries. Conclusion: The type of suggestions for improving healthcare practice was largely similar across different stakeholder groups, mainly addressing healthcare professionals, patient factors and professional interactions. As this study is one of the first of its kind, it is important that more research is done on tailored implementation strategies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2014
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17. A tailored implementation intervention to implement recommendations addressing polypharmacy in multimorbid patients: study protocol of a cluster randomized controlled trial.
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Jäger, Cornelia, Freund, Tobias, Steinhäuser, Jost, Joos, Stefanie, Wensing, Michel, and Szecsenyi, Joachim
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POLYPHARMACY ,PATHOLOGICAL anatomy ,PATIENTS ,HOSPITAL care ,CHRONIC diseases - Abstract
Background Multimorbid patients frequently receive complex medication regimens and are at higher risk for adverse drug reactions and hospitalisations. Managing patients with polypharmacy is demanding, because it requires coordination of multiple prescribers and intensive monitoring. Three evidence-based recommendations addressing polypharmacy in primary care are structured medication counselling, use of medication lists and medication reviews to avoid potentially inappropriate medication (PIM). Although promising to improve patient outcomes, these recommendations are not well implemented in German routine care. Implementation of guidelines is often hindered by specific "determinants of change". "Tailored" interventions are designed to specifically address previously identified determinants. This study examines a tailored intervention to implement the aforementioned recommendations into primary care practices. This study is part of the European Tailored Interventions for Chronic Diseases project, which aims at contributing knowledge about the methods used for tailoring. Methods/Design The study is designed as a cluster randomized controlled trial with primary care practices of general practitioners (GPs) who are organized in quality circles. Quality circles will be the unit of randomization with a 1:1 ratio. Follow-up time is 6 months. GPs and healthcare assistants in the intervention group will receive training on medication management. Each GP will create a tailored concept of how to implement the three recommendations into his/her practice. Evidence-based checklists for medication counselling and medication reviews will be provided for physicians. A tablet PC with an interactive educational tool and information leaflets will be provided for use by patients to inform about the necessity of continuous medication management. Control practices will not receive special training and will provide care as usual. Primary outcome is the degree of implementation of the three recommendations, which will be measured using a prespecified set of indicators. Additionally, the PIM prescription rate, patient activation, patients' beliefs about medicine, medication adherence and patients' social support will be measured. Discussion This study will contribute knowledge about the feasibility of implementing recommendations for managing patients with polypharmacy in primary care practices. Additionally, this study will contribute knowledge about methods for tailoring of implementation interventions [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
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