Authors

  1. Southern, William N. MD, MS
  2. Drainoni, Mari-Lynn PhD
  3. Smith, Bryce D. PhD, MSSW
  4. Koppelman, Elisa MSW, MPH
  5. McKee, M. Diane MD, MS
  6. Christiansen, Cindy L. PhD
  7. Gifford, Allen L. MD
  8. Weinbaum, Cindy M. MD, MPH
  9. Litwin, Alain H. MD, MPH, MS

Abstract

Background: Testing for patients at risk for hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection is recommended, but it is unclear whether providers adhere to testing guidelines. We aimed to measure adherence to an HCV screening protocol during a multifaceted continuous intervention.

 

Subjects and Methods: Prospective cohort design to examine the associations between patient-level, physician-level, and visit-level characteristics and adherence to an HCV screening protocol. Study participants included all patients with a visit to 1 of the 3 study clinics and the physicians who cared for them. Adherence to the HCV screening protocol and patient-level, physician-level, and visit-level predictors of adherence were measured.

 

Results: A total of 8981 patients and 154 physicians were examined. Overall protocol adherence rate was 36.1%. In multivariate analysis, patient male sex (odds ratio [OR] = 1.18), new patient (OR = 1.23), morning visit (OR = 1.32), and patients' preferred language being non-English (OR = 0.87) were significantly associated with screening adherence. There was a wide variation in overall adherence among physicians (range, 0%-92.4%). Screening adherence continuously declined from 59.1% in week 1 of the study to 13.7% in week 15 (final week). When implementing complex clinical practice guidelines, planners should address physician attitudinal barriers as well as gaps in knowledge to maximize adherence.