Dokument: Optimising the treatment of chronic ischemic heart disease by training general practitioners to deliver very brief advice on physical activity (OptiCor): protocol of the systematic development and evaluation of a complex intervention

Titel:Optimising the treatment of chronic ischemic heart disease by training general practitioners to deliver very brief advice on physical activity (OptiCor): protocol of the systematic development and evaluation of a complex intervention
URL für Lesezeichen:https://docserv.uni-duesseldorf.de/servlets/DocumentServlet?id=68319
URN (NBN):urn:nbn:de:hbz:061-20250128-112054-8
Kollektion:Publikationen
Sprache:Englisch
Dokumententyp:Wissenschaftliche Texte » Artikel, Aufsatz
Medientyp:Text
Autoren: Hoppe, Sabrina [Autor]
Prinz, Alicia [Autor]
Crutzen, Rik [Autor]
Donner-Banzhoff, Norbert [Autor]
Icks, Andrea [Autor]
Kotz, Daniel [Autor]
Kuß, Oliver [Autor]
Mons, Ute [Autor]
Vomhof, Markus [Autor]
Wilm, Stefan [Autor]
Dateien:
[Dateien anzeigen]Adobe PDF
[Details]1,30 MB in einer Datei
[ZIP-Datei erzeugen]
Dateien vom 28.01.2025 / geändert 28.01.2025
Stichwörter:Physical activity, Primary care, General practice, Brief advice, Chronic ischemic heart disease, Coronary heart disease
Beschreibung:Background

Chronic ischemic heart disease (IHD) is one of the leading causes of morbidity and mortality. Physical activity (PA) is an effective secondary preventive strategy in IHD management. The German treatment guideline recommends that general practitioners (GPs) deliver PA advice to patients. This recommendation seems inadequately implemented, often due to GP’s insufficient specific training. International guidelines recommend training GPs in how to deliver such advice effectively and efficiently. Evidence is lacking on whether such training can enhance the frequency and quality of PA advice in routine care. The OptiCor project aims to develop and evaluate a GP training in the delivery of very brief PA advice to optimise the treatment of patients with IHD in general practice.
Methods

OptiCor comprises three study phases according to the Medical Research Council recommendations for developing and evaluating complex interventions.

Phase 1 (needs analysis): A nationwide representative household survey will be conducted to collect data on the receipt of GP-delivered PA advice in people with IHD. Qualitative interviews and group discussions with GPs and people with IHD will help to explore, e.g., attitudes, experiences with, and barriers and facilitators of PA advice implementation or reception, respectively. Findings will inform the training development.

Phase 2 (pilot): A pragmatic cluster randomised controlled trial (cRCT) on the effectiveness of the developed training on proportions of GP-delivered PA advice during routine care of IHD patients will be piloted.

Phase 3 (evaluation): A full pragmatic cRCT will be conducted with patient-reported proportions of GP-delivered PA advice as primary endpoint. Collection of health economic and process-related data will facilitate a potential future broad implementation and health economic evaluation of the training.
Discussion

If the developed training successfully improves proportions and quality of GP delivered PA advice to patients with IHD, it could serve as a low-threshold and sustainable strategy for implementing PA recommendations in the secondary prevention of IHD in routine GP practice.
Rechtliche Vermerke:Originalveröffentlichung:
Hoppe, S., Prinz, A., Crutzen, R., Donner-Banzhoff, N., Icks, A., Kotz, D., Kuß, O., Mons, U., Vomhof, M., Wilm, S., & Kastaun, S. (2024). Optimising the treatment of chronic ischemic heart disease by training general practitioners to deliver very brief advice on physical activity (OptiCor): protocol of the systematic development and evaluation of a complex intervention. BMC Primary Care, 25, Article 404. https://doi.org/10.1186/s12875-024-02655-3
Lizenz:Creative Commons Lizenzvertrag
Dieses Werk ist lizenziert unter einer Creative Commons Namensnennung 4.0 International Lizenz
Fachbereich / Einrichtung:Medizinische Fakultät
Dokument erstellt am:28.01.2025
Dateien geändert am:28.01.2025
english
Benutzer
Status: Gast
Aktionen