Abstract Background Uptake of interventions to improve quality of care by clinicians is variable and is influenced by clinicians' attitudes. The influence of clinicians' experience with an intervention on their preference for adopting interventions is largely unknown. Methods Thematic analysis of semi-structured interviews exploring views and attitudes towards an illness-focused intervention (specific communication skills training) and a disease-focused intervention (C-reactive protein, or CRP, point-of-care testing) to optimize management of lower respiratory tract infections (LRTI) among general practitioners (GPs) who had used both interventions for two years in a randomised trial (exposed GPs), and GPs without experience of either inter...
BACKGROUND Evidence shows a high rate of unnecessary antibiotic prescriptions in primary care in Eur...
BACKGROUND Evidence shows a high rate of unnecessary antibiotic prescriptions in primary care in Eur...
BACKGROUND Evidence shows a high rate of unnecessary antibiotic prescriptions in primary care in Eur...
BACKGROUND: Uptake of interventions to improve quality of care by clinicians is variable and is infl...
BACKGROUND: Uptake of interventions to improve quality of care by clinicians is variable and is infl...
Background Uptake of interventions to improve quality of care by clinicians is variable and is infl...
Background Uptake of interventions to improve quality of care by clinicians is variable and is infl...
Background Uptake of interventions to improve quality of care by clinicians is variable and is infl...
BACKGROUND: In a pan-European randomised controlled trial (GRACE INTRO) of two interventions, (i) a ...
BACKGROUND: In a pan-European randomised controlled trial (GRACE INTRO) of two interventions, (i) a ...
10.1038/npjpcrm.2014.26BACKGROUND: In a pan-European randomised controlled trial (GRACE INTRO) of tw...
BACKGROUND: In a pan-European randomised controlled trial (GRACE INTRO) of two interventions, (i) a ...
BACKGROUND: In a pan-European randomised controlled trial (GRACE INTRO) of two interventions, (i) a ...
Background: In a pan-European randomised controlled trial (GRACE INTRO) of two interventions, (i)...
Background: In a pan-European randomised controlled trial (GRACE INTRO) of two interventions, (i)...
BACKGROUND Evidence shows a high rate of unnecessary antibiotic prescriptions in primary care in Eur...
BACKGROUND Evidence shows a high rate of unnecessary antibiotic prescriptions in primary care in Eur...
BACKGROUND Evidence shows a high rate of unnecessary antibiotic prescriptions in primary care in Eur...
BACKGROUND: Uptake of interventions to improve quality of care by clinicians is variable and is infl...
BACKGROUND: Uptake of interventions to improve quality of care by clinicians is variable and is infl...
Background Uptake of interventions to improve quality of care by clinicians is variable and is infl...
Background Uptake of interventions to improve quality of care by clinicians is variable and is infl...
Background Uptake of interventions to improve quality of care by clinicians is variable and is infl...
BACKGROUND: In a pan-European randomised controlled trial (GRACE INTRO) of two interventions, (i) a ...
BACKGROUND: In a pan-European randomised controlled trial (GRACE INTRO) of two interventions, (i) a ...
10.1038/npjpcrm.2014.26BACKGROUND: In a pan-European randomised controlled trial (GRACE INTRO) of tw...
BACKGROUND: In a pan-European randomised controlled trial (GRACE INTRO) of two interventions, (i) a ...
BACKGROUND: In a pan-European randomised controlled trial (GRACE INTRO) of two interventions, (i) a ...
Background: In a pan-European randomised controlled trial (GRACE INTRO) of two interventions, (i)...
Background: In a pan-European randomised controlled trial (GRACE INTRO) of two interventions, (i)...
BACKGROUND Evidence shows a high rate of unnecessary antibiotic prescriptions in primary care in Eur...
BACKGROUND Evidence shows a high rate of unnecessary antibiotic prescriptions in primary care in Eur...
BACKGROUND Evidence shows a high rate of unnecessary antibiotic prescriptions in primary care in Eur...