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Published in: BMC Infectious Diseases 1/2018

Open Access 01-12-2018 | Research article

An appraisal: how notifiable infectious diseases are reported by Hungarian family physicians

Authors: Katalin Vraukó, Zoltán Jancsó, László Kalabay, Andrea Lukács, Gabriella Maráczi, Lajos Mester, Anna Nánási, József Rinfel, Tamás Sárosi, Ferenc Tamás, Albert Varga, József Vitrai, Imre Rurik

Published in: BMC Infectious Diseases | Issue 1/2018

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Abstract

Background

Within the frame of National Epidemiological Surveillance System, family physicians have an obligation to report infections and suspicions cases.
The aim of this study was to evaluate the knowledge, attitudes, daily practice and the reporting activities of Hungarian family physicians regarding to infectious diseases.

Methods

A self-administered survey was developed, validated and used. The survey was completed by family physicians who had taken part in continuous medical educational programmes of all Hungarian medical faculties. The questionnaire, consisting demographic questions and 10 statements about their reporting habits were completed by 347 doctors, 8% of the total number of family physicians. The data were processed in a cross-sectional design with general linear model.

Results

According to the majority of responders, the current reporting system works efficiently. Rural physicians were mainly agreed, that reporting is not a simply obligation, it is a professional task as well. They were less hindered in daily work by reporting activities, waited less for laboratory confirmation before reporting, reported suspicious cases more frequently.
Practitioner’s based in urban settlements preferred to await laboratory tests before reporting and were hindered less by failures of the electronic reporting system.
Older physicians trusted more in the recent system and they wished to increase the number of reports.
Female physicians have higher consciousness in epidemiology. They were mostly in agreement that even severe infectious diseases can be diagnosed at primary care level and their daily practices were less burdened by reporting duties.

Conclusions

Both the epidemiological knowledge of general practitioners’ and the electronic surveillance systems should be improved. There is a need to develope the electronic infrastructure of primary care. More and regular control is also expected by the health care authorities, beside the synthesis of professional and governmental expectations and regulations.
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Metadata
Title
An appraisal: how notifiable infectious diseases are reported by Hungarian family physicians
Authors
Katalin Vraukó
Zoltán Jancsó
László Kalabay
Andrea Lukács
Gabriella Maráczi
Lajos Mester
Anna Nánási
József Rinfel
Tamás Sárosi
Ferenc Tamás
Albert Varga
József Vitrai
Imre Rurik
Publication date
01-12-2018
Publisher
BioMed Central
Published in
BMC Infectious Diseases / Issue 1/2018
Electronic ISSN: 1471-2334
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12879-018-2948-5

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