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Primary Care Respiratory Journal: Journal of the General Practice Airways Group logoLink to Primary Care Respiratory Journal: Journal of the General Practice Airways Group
letter
. 2011 Feb 18;20(2):210–213. doi: 10.4104/pcrj.2011.00006

Impact of an educational intervention on the quality of spirometry performance in a general practice: an audit

Robin Carr 1,*, Vicky Telford 1, Gareth Waters 1
PMCID: PMC6549838  PMID: 21336466

Abstract

Aims

To assess the technical performance of spirometry in one general practice, and then to deliver in-house education to effect change.

Methods

Retrospective audit of 45 spirometry reports assessed against possible alternative quality criteria. Three subsequent educational interventions for those clinicians performing and interpreting spirometry. Re-audit of 45 spirometry report sheets four months later against the same criteria.

Results

38% of the initial post-bronchodilator spirometries were technically flawed. Post-education, 2% of spirometries were technically flawed and respiratory referrals fell by 50%.

Conclusion

The technical quality of practice spirometry can be audited. In-house education significantly reduced spirometry errors and was associated with a 50% reduction in respiratory referrals.

Keywords: primary care, diagnosis, management, spirometry, general practice, quality, audit, education

Full Text

The Full Text of this article is available as a PDF (494.1 KB).

Footnotes

RC has received lecture fees for primary care education from GlaxoSmithKline, AstraZeneca, Boehringer Ingelheim, Pfizer. At the time of the study he was Medical Director of the Somerset COPD service.


Articles from Primary Care Respiratory Journal: Journal of the General Practice Airways Group are provided here courtesy of Primary Care Respiratory Society UK/Macmillan Publishers Limited

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