• 1. Chinese Evidence-based Medicine Center, West China Hospital, Sichuan University, Chengdu 610041, China;2. West China School of Public Health, Sichuan University, Chengdu 610041, China;3. Chengdu Health Bureau, Chengdu 610042, China;4. West China Medical School, Sichuan University, Chengdu 610041, China;
LI Youping, Email: yzmylab@hotmail.com
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Objective  To provide basic data for further application of national essential medicine list (EML) in Chengdu, through a survey of key-workers or persons, who attended the lecture of EML, in charge of village town hospitals or community medical service centers, and to find out their awareness of and attitudes to the essential medicine and requirements and suggestions for EML training.
Methods  Based on principles and methods of modern cognitive psychology, we designed the questionnaire and carried out the survey face to face. Two people input the data independently and verified them. Proportions were used to analyze the data through the Excel software.
Results  (1) The proportions ofcorrect answers to the questions of essential medicine conception, use range of EML and the relationship between EML and essential insurance medicines list were 89%, 91% and 87%, respectively. (2) 46% of the persons investigated (117 persons) chose “always consider preferentially using the essential medicine when prescribing”, 31% (81 persons) “consider using the essential medicine in most cases”. (3) 41% of the persons investigated (103 persons) chose “comparatively welcome” for the EML. (4) Problems of implementing EML in village town hospitals or community medical service centers, in the order of importance decreasing, were: “income and compensation”, “awareness of the essential medicine and prescribing habit of the doctor”, “patient’s cognition of essential medicine and preference to drug use”, “safety and effectiveness of the essential medicine”, “the applicability of essential medicine ” and “the purchase and delivery of essential medicine”, respectively. (5) The ways of getting information of essential medicine were 19.6% (187 person-time) through documents, 18.6% (177 persontime) through conferences and 15.3% (146 person-time) through lectures. (6) 60% of the persons investigated (154 persons) attended training of the essential medicine once or twice. (7) 77% of the persons investigated (196 persons) were trained for less than one week for essential medicine. (8) Requirements and suggestions on the training of essential medicine: 42% (71 person-time) enlarging the targeted people, 22% (38 person-time) increasing the training time,16% (27 person-time) improving practicability and specificity of training contents, 11% (18 person-time) diversifying training ways, 9% (15 persontime) requiring “training according to needs ” which addresses specific problems after investigation.
Conclusion  Training of essential medicine should be strengthened for medical workers in the village town hospitals or community medical service centers, and researches should be carried out on evaluation of EML applicability, performance of EML implementation, financial aiding, income of medical worker, procurement and reimburse, etc.

Citation: LI Honghao,YANG Xiaoyan,WANG Shuai,YANG Xiaoguang,YANG Yuelin,QIN Lixia,LIN Yixiao,LI Youping. Investigation on the Awareness of and Training Needs for the National Essential Medicine (2009 version) in Key-workers or Persons Who are in Charge of Village Town Hospitals/Community Medical Service Centers in Chengdu City. Chinese Journal of Evidence-Based Medicine, 2010, 10(7): 804-810. doi: 10.7507/1672-2531.20100497 Copy

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