Safe care in general practice for people living with HIV
requires early diagnosis of undetected infection and safe co-prescribing with
antiretroviral therapy (ART).
To evaluate safe co-prescribing in general practice patients
who are taking ART, and to describe missed diagnostic opportunities for
undiagnosed HIV infection in primary care.
Retrospective case-notes review in general practices within
NHS City and Hackney Primary Care Trust (PCT), London, UK.
All general practices in NHS City and Hackney PCT were
invited to participate. Patients known to be HIV positive were identified using
Read Codes. Each practice undertook retrospective case-notes reviews on
specialist correspondence, coding of ART, prescribing of common contraindicated
drug pairings, and missed opportunities for HIV diagnosis.
In total, 31/44 (70.5%) practices participated, and 1022
people living with HIV were identified. Practices had received HIV clinic
letters for 698 of those 1022 (68.3%) patients in the previous 12 months. Of
the 787 patients known to be prescribed ART, only 413 (52.5%) had correct drug
codes recorded; 32/787 (4.1%) were receiving specified contraindicated drug
pairings. In total, 89 patients were eligible for their case-notes to undergo a
retrospective review of occurrences that took place pre-diagnosis. In the 2
years preceding diagnosis, these 89 had attended 716 face-to-face GP
consultations, of which 123 (17.2%) were for indicator conditions. Fifty-one of
these patients (57.3%) presented at least once with an indicator condition
(interquartile range 1-3; median 2).
In a large-scale evaluation of GP records of people living
with HIV, gaps in ART recording and co-prescribing were identified, and
evidence demonstrated missed opportunities for diagnosis within general
practice. Specialists and generalists must communicate better to enhance safe
prescribing and reduce delayed diagnosis.
Via: http://goo.gl/hyM4hl Purchase
full article at: http://goo.gl/9fUq4f
By: Wellesley R1, Whittle A2, Figueroa J2, Anderson J3, Castles R4, Boomla K1, Griffiths C1, Leber W1.
- 1Centre for Primary Care and Public Health, Queen Mary University of London, London.
- 2NHS City and Hackney PCT, London.
- 3Centre for the Study of Sexual Health and HIV;
- 4Jonathan Mann Centre, Homerton University Hospital NHS Foundation Trust, London.
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