# Improved diagnostic management of children with acute infections following the introduction of point-of-care C-reactive protein testing and general practitioner education in Latvia: a post hoc analyses of a randomised controlled intervention study

**Authors:** Zane Likopa, Anda Kivite-Urtane, Ieva Strele, Jana Pavare

PMC · DOI: 10.1080/02813432.2025.2571927 · Scandinavian Journal of Primary Health Care · 2025-10-29

## TL;DR

In Latvia, providing general practitioners with point-of-care C-reactive protein testing and education increased diagnostic testing before antibiotic use, especially in rural areas.

## Contribution

Combining point-of-care CRP testing with GP education significantly increased diagnostic testing before antibiotic prescribing.

## Key findings

- Diagnostic testing increased significantly in the combined intervention group compared to usual care.
- Rural practices and longer expected lab result times were associated with higher diagnostic testing increases.
- Low CRP values or negative tests did not always prevent antibiotic prescriptions.

## Abstract

In order to reduce unnecessary antibiotic prescribing, diagnostic processes require improvement for children in primary care.

Post hoc analyses of randomised controlled intervention study.

Eighty general practitioner (GP) practices throughout Latvia.

In the first study period, one GP group received combined interventions (access to CRP POCT and GP education), while the second GP group continued usual care (control group). In the second study period, the GP groups were switched – previous control group received combined intervention, but previous intervention group re-established usual care, but the long-term education effect was evaluated in this group.

Children with acute infections consulted by a GP.

Impact of combined intervention and long-term education on testing level (CRP, full blood count, Strep A test, influenza test, urinalysis and X-ray) before antibiotic prescribing. Patient- and GPs- related predictors (including practice location and access to laboratory services) of diagnostic testing were also analysed. Secondary outcome was antibiotic prescribing according to the test results.

Diagnostic testing was significantly increased in the combined intervention group versus the usual care group (aOR 11.1, 95% CI 8.0–15.3); however, it was decreased in the long-term education group (26.4%) (aOR 0.5, 95% CI 0.3–0.8). Rural practices and a longer expected time of laboratory results were associated with a more pronounced increase in diagnostic testing in the combined intervention group (aOR 37.6, 95% CI 17.9–79.0; aOR 23.2, 95% CI 14.1–38.0, respectively). It was found that a low CRP value, negative Strep A test or normal X-ray often did not convince GPs to withhold antibiotics.

The availability of CRP POCT and GP education results in a much higher level of diagnostic testing prior to antibiotic prescribing, especially in rural regions. Further improvements in more rational testing and the interpretation of results to guide appropriate antibiotic prescribing are essential.

Trial registration: ISRCTN registry - ISRCTN34931655

## Full-text entities

- **Genes:** CRP (C-reactive protein) [NCBI Gene 1401] {aka PTX1}
- **Diseases:** influenza (MESH:D007251), acute infections (MESH:D000208)
- **Chemicals:** Strep A (-)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## References

43 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12918278/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12918278