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Knowledge and Confidence in the diagnosis and management of leprosy among Family Medicine Specialists in Malaysia.
Abstract
Editor's abstract:
Background: Family Medicine Specialists (FMS) plays a pivotal role in the detection of leprosy in primary care. This study determines the knowledge and confidence among FMS in Malaysia.
Method: Pre-intervention questionnaire were conducted followed by a 3 days educational intervention. Post-intervention questionnaire were conducted again 2 months thereafter. The questionnaire assessed knowledge and confidence in the diagnosis and management of leprosy.
Results: The mean total marks for the pre-intervention knowledge questionnaires was 35.4 out of 50 and the mean confidence was 4.0 out of 10 for diagnosis and 3.3 out of 10 for management. Knowledge improved 24.0% post-intervention (p<0.001). Knowledge on pathogenesis and clinical features improved the most with 38.5% and 32.4% respectively whereas knowledge on leprosy reactions improved the least with only 15.1%. The confidence level improved 85% to 7.4 for diagnosis and 118.2% to 7.2 for management post-intervention (p<0.001). FMS with more experience, seeing more than 5 patients in their working life, had better confidence pre-intervention but it became insignificant post-intervention.
Conclusion: Knowledge of FMS was good but their confidence was low pre-intervention. They improved significantly post-intervention. It is hoped that the improvement can allow for earlier detection of leprosy to prevent clinical and epidemiological sequelae.
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Type
Journal Article