Objective: To examine anticoagulation management at the Bella Coola Medical Clinic in British Columbia.
Design: Charts of all patients in the Bella Coola Valley receiving warfarin were assessed. Data were analyzed using Microsoft Excel.
Setting: Bella Coola Medical Clinic on the remote central coast of British Columbia.
Participants: Twenty-one patients at the Bella Coola Medical Clinic who were receiving warfarin.
Main Outcome Measures: All international normalized ratio (INR) tests over the preceding 12 months were examined for results, time elapsed since previous test, and interval until next scheduled test.
Results: An in-range INR rate of 60% is considered acceptable for anticoagulation services. The clinic had performed 406 INR tests on these 21 patients over the last 12 months. We found that 53% of all INR results fell strictly within the recommended therapeutic range. The relative success of anticoagulation management in Bella Coola probably results from several factors. For instance, physicians usually responded to out-of-range INR results with close monitoring: in 71% of cases, follow-up tests were scheduled within 1 week. On average, patients attended 77% of these visits on schedule; 58% of all out-of-range INR results were followed up with retesting within 1 week.
Conclusion: Our results suggest that primary care physicians can manage anticoagulation adequately, even in remote settings.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1472961 | PMC |
Nat Ecol Evol
November 2018
Nuxalk Stewardship Office, Nuxalk Nation, Bella Coola, British Columbia, Canada.
Can J Nurs Res
September 2008
Faculty of Nursing, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Canada.
A narrative inquiry approach was used to explore the experience of Aboriginal people living with type 2 diabetes mellitus in a rural community. Narrative inquiry based on hermeneutic phenomenological philosophy was the methodology used to guide the research. A purposive sample of 4 persons of Nuxalk ancestry living in Bella Coola, Canada, were selected for their ability to present rich life narratives and to reveal meaning in their particular diabetes stories.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCan Fam Physician
September 2005
Nursing Program, Prince George, BC.
Objective: To determine whether having cesarean section capability in an isolated rural community makes a difference in adverse maternal or perinatal outcomes.
Design: Retrospective study comparing population-based obstetric outcomes of two rural remote hospitals in northwestern British Columbia. One hospital had cesarean section capability; one did not.
Can Fam Physician
March 2005
University of British Columbia, Vancouver.
Objective: To examine anticoagulation management at the Bella Coola Medical Clinic in British Columbia.
Design: Charts of all patients in the Bella Coola Valley receiving warfarin were assessed. Data were analyzed using Microsoft Excel.
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