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- Sharon L Cadogan, John P Browne, Colin P Bradley, Anthony P Fitzgerald, and Mary R Cahill.
- School of Public Health.
- Br J Gen Pract. 2020 Feb 1; 70 (691): e146-e154.
BackgroundImplementation science experts recommend that theory-based strategies, developed in collaboration with healthcare professionals, have greater chance of success.AimThis study evaluated the impact of a theory-based strategy for optimising the use of serum immunoglobulin testing in primary care.Design And SettingAn interrupted time series with segmented regression analysis in the Cork-Kerry region, Ireland. An intervention was devised comprising a guideline and educational messages-based strategy targeting previously identified GP concerns relevant to testing for serum immunoglobulins.MethodInterrupted time series with segmented regression analysis was conducted to evaluate the intervention, using routine laboratory data from January 2012 to October 2016. Data were organised into fortnightly segments (96 time points pre-intervention and 26 post-intervention) and analysed using incidence rate ratios with their corresponding 95% confidence intervals.ResultsIn the most parsimonious model, the change in trend before and after the introduction of the intervention was statistically significant. In the 1-year period following the implementation of the strategy, test orders were falling at a rate of 0.42% per fortnight (P<0.001), with an absolute reduction of 0.59% per fortnight, corresponding to a reduction of 14.5% over the 12-month study period.ConclusionThe authors' tailored guideline combined with educational messages reduced serum immunoglobulin test ordering in primary care over a 1-year period. Given the rarity of the conditions for which the test is utilised and the fact that the researchers had only population-level data, further investigation is required to examine the clinical implications of this change in test-ordering patterns.© British Journal of General Practice 2020.
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