| Literature DB >> 26845640 |
Marcia Vervloet1, Marianne A Meulepas2,3, Jochen W L Cals4, Mariëtta Eimers2, Lucas S van der Hoek1, Liset van Dijk1.
Abstract
Irrational antibiotic use for respiratory tract infections (RTI) is a major driver of bacterial resistance. The aim of this study was to evaluate the effect of a multifaceted peer-group based intervention aiming to reduce RTI-related antibiotic prescriptions in family practice. This was a cluster randomized controlled trial with pre- and follow-up measurement. The intervention was implemented through PharmacoTherapy Audit Meetings (PTAM) in which family physicians (FPs) and pharmacists collaborate. Four PTAM groups received the intervention consisting of: (1) FP communication skills training, including communication about delayed prescribing; (2) implementation of antibiotic prescribing agreements in FPs' Electronic Prescribing Systems; (3) quarterly feedback figures for FPs. Four other PTAM groups were matched controls. Primary outcome measure was the number of RTI-related antibiotic prescriptions after the intervention, assessed with multilevel linear regression analyses. Total number and number of prescriptions stratified by age (under/over 12 years) were analysed. At baseline, the average total number of RTI-related antibiotic prescriptions per 1,000 patients was 207.9 and 176.7 in the intervention and control PTAM groups, respectively. At follow-up, FPs in both the intervention and control groups prescribed significantly less antibiotics. For adolescents and adults, the drop in number of antibiotic prescription was significantly larger in the intervention groups (-27.8 per 1,000 patients) than the control groups (-7.2 per 1,000 patients; P<0.05). This multifaceted peer-group-based intervention was effective in reducing the number of RTI-related antibiotic prescriptions for adolescents and adults. To affect antibiotic prescribing in children other methods are needed.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 26845640 PMCID: PMC4741286 DOI: 10.1038/npjpcrm.2015.83
Source DB: PubMed Journal: NPJ Prim Care Respir Med ISSN: 2055-1010 Impact factor: 2.871
The standardized number of antibiotic prescriptions for RTI (per 1,000 patients at PTAM group level per year) at baseline and follow-up in the intervention and matched control PTAM groups, and the change in number of prescriptions between baseline and follow-up
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| Group 1: 5 FPs; 5,359 patients | 185 | 118 | −67 (36%) |
| Group 2: 5 FPs; 8,826 patients | 177 | 144 | −33 (19%) |
| Group 3: 13 FPs; 19,822 patients | 280 | 243 | −37 (13%) |
| Group 4: 16 FPs; 25,476 patients | 170 | 117 | −53 (31%) |
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| Group 1: 6 FPs; 11,464 patients | 173 | 138 | −35 (20%) |
| Group 2: 5 FPs; 12,702 patients | 205 | 199 | −6 (3%) |
| Group 3: 11 FPs; 29,020 patients | 190 | 190 | 0 (0%) |
| Group 4: 16 FPs; 41,581 patients | 152 | 113 | −39 (26%) |
Abbreviations: FP, family physician; PTAM, Pharmaco Therapy Audit Meetings; RTI, respiratory tract infections.
One FP had no antibiotic prescriptions for RTI at baseline.
Differences in standardized average number of RTI-related antibiotic prescriptions (per 1,000 patients per year) between intervention and control PTAM groups for the total number of prescriptions and for prescriptions stratified by age (cut-off: 12 years), assessed with multilevel modelling
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| Baseline | 207.9 | 176.7 | 31.1 |
| Follow-up | 161.2 | 154.1 | 7.1 |
| Change | −46.7*** | −22.7* | |
Significance levels: *P<0.05; **P<0.01; ***P<0.001.
Abbreviations: PTAM, PharmacoTherapy Audit Meetings; RTI, respiratory tract infections.
For 5.3% of patients age was unknown.
For 10.6% of patients age was unknown.
Number of delayed prescriptions issued by FPs in the intervention PTAM groups and those collected at the pharmacy during a maximum period of 6 months, stratified by age
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| Group 1: 5 FPs; 5,359 patients | 11 | 1 (9%) | 9 | 1 (11%) |
| Group 2: 5 FPs; 8,826 patients | 20 | 9 (45%) | 11 | 6 (55%) |
| Group 3: 13 FPs; 19,822 patients | 27 | 10 (37%) | 15 | 2 (13%) |
| Group 4: 16 FPs; 25,476 patients | 28 | 17 (61%) | 39 | 16 (41%) |
| Total (39 FPs; 59,483 patients) | 86 | 37 (43%) | 74 | 25 (34%) |
Abbreviations: FP, family physician; PTAM, PharmacoTherapy Audit Meetings.
Figure 1Flow diagram of PTAM groups in this study.