| Literature DB >> 27999058 |
Elizabeth Louise Anne Cross1, Robert Tolfree2, Ruth Kipping3.
Abstract
Background: Excessive use of antibiotics accelerates the acquisition/spread of antimicrobial resistance. A systematic review was conducted to identify the components of successful communication interventions targeted at the general public to improve antibiotic use.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 27999058 PMCID: PMC7263825 DOI: 10.1093/jac/dkw520
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Antimicrob Chemother ISSN: 0305-7453 Impact factor: 5.790
Figure 1Flow diagram of systematic review search.
Inclusion and exclusion criteria
| Inclusion criteria | Exclusion criteria | |
|---|---|---|
| Language | English | non-English |
| Time period | inception of databases to 2015 | none |
| Population | general public | patients residents in nursing homes/long-term care facilities interventions based solely in clinical settings clinicians and other healthcare staff children (age < 18 years) |
| Intervention | interventions employing some form of communication | interventions that targeted only prescribing of: antivirals, antimalarials, antifungal agents or antituberculosis agents |
| Comparison | studies employing a control group | studies that did not employ a control group |
| Outcome | change in: antibiotic prescribing and/or consumption and/or the public’s antibiotic-related knowledge, attitudes or behaviour | outcomes that were not changes in antibiotic prescribing or consumption and/or changes in antibiotic-related knowledge, attitudes and behaviour |
| Study | RCTs cluster-RCTs quasi-RCTs ITS controlled before-and-after studies | descriptive studies qualitative studies studies that did not employ a control group studies that did not measure outcomes pre- and post-intervention |
ITS, interrupted time series.
Summary of characteristics of included studies
| First author, year | Study design | Participants | Country | Intervention | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| elements | clinician element | Target illness | Duration | ||||
| Bauraind, 200438 | interrupted time series | general public, nationwide | Belgium | mass media campaign (including television); distribution of written materials for public | yes | not specified | 3 months |
| Sabuncu, 200937 | interrupted time series | general public, nationwide | France | mass media campaign (including television); training of day care workers to deliver educational messages, travelling education events and written materials | yes | RTIs | 6 months |
| Bernier, 201436 | interrupted time series | ||||||
| McNulty, 201039 | controlled before-and-after survey | 1888 persons pre- and 1830 post-intervention in 1 intervention and 1 control country | UK | mass media campaign (no television); written materials and practice-based materials | yes | RTIs | 1 month |
| Belongia, 200528 | cohort analytic | general public and 5115 primary care clinicians in 1 intervention and 1 control state | US | mass media campaign (including television); educational meetings and distribution of written materials for public | yes | not specified | not clear |
| Samore, 200533 | cluster-RCT | 407460 persons and 334 clinicians in 12 intervention and 6 control communities | US | full intervention (mass media campaign with no television; educational events, written materials, mailed household materials and clinician element) | yes (full intervention group only) | RTIs | not clear |
| partial intervention (community element alone) | |||||||
| Rubin, 200534 | controlled clinical trial | general public < 10000 and 2 family practice groups in 1 intervention community and the rest of rural Utah as a control community | US | mass media campaign (no television); educational materials for patients | yes | RTIs | ∼6 months |
| Hennessy, 200232 | controlled clinical trial | 13 villages in 1 intervention region and 2 control regions | US | community-wide educational events and meetings, educational materials in high schools, mailed written materials to households | yes | RTIs | 6 months |
| Lambert, 200740 | retrospective controlled before-and-after study | population of 16 intervention primary care organizations, number of control organizations not clear | UK | mass media campaign (including television); written materials | no | not specified | 2 months |
| Gonzales, 200831 | controlled clinical trial | 2.2 million persons in 1 intervention community and 0.53 million in 1 control community | US | mass media campaign (no television); educational events (including awareness week and ‘Antibiotics Amnesty Month’) and distribution of written educational materials for public | yes | not specified | 4 months |
| Formoso, 201335 | controlled clinical trial | 1.15 million persons in 11 intervention health districts and 3.25 million in 31 control health districts | Italy | mass media campaign (including television); educational events and distribution of written materials for public | yes | RTIs | 4 months |
| Gonzales, 199929 | controlled clinical trial | 2462 persons pre-, 2027 post-intervention and 93 healthcare professionals in 2 intervention practices and 2 control practices | US | full intervention (mailed educational household materials, practice-based materials and clinician elements). | yes | RTIs | not clear |
| limited intervention (practice-based element only) | |||||||
| Gonzales, 200530 | controlled clinical trial | population of 6 intervention and 362 control practices | US | mailed household and practice-based educational materials (including self-management guide) | yes (already in place) | RTIs | not clear |
| Arparsrithong-sagul, 201541 | controlled clinical trial | 48 intervention and 68 control groceries and grocery owners in 20 intervention and 20 control villages | Thailand | grocery shop-based face-to-face education by trained ‘change agents’ | no | not specified | not clear |
Summary of quality assessment of included studies
| First author, year | Selection bias | Study design | Confounders | Blinding | Data collection methods | Withdrawals and drop-outs | Global rating |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Arparsrithongsagul, 2015 | moderate | strong | moderate | moderate | weak | strong | moderate |
| Bauraind, 2004 | moderate | moderate | strong | moderate | weak | moderate | moderate |
| Belongia, 2005 | weak | moderate | moderate | moderate | weak | moderate | weak |
| Formoso, 2013 | moderate | strong | strong | moderate | weak | moderate | moderate |
| Gonzales, 1999 | moderate | strong | moderate | moderate | weak | weak | weak |
| Gonzales, 2005 | weak | strong | moderate | moderate | weak | strong | weak |
| Gonzales, 2008 | moderate | strong | strong | moderate | weak | moderate | moderate |
| Hennessy, 2002 | moderate | strong | weak | moderate | weak | strong | weak |
| Lambert, 2007 | moderate | weak | moderate | moderate | weak | moderate | weak |
| McNulty, 2010 | moderate | weak | strong | moderate | weak | moderate | weak |
| Rubin, 2005 | moderate | strong | weak | moderate | weak | moderate | weak |
| Sabuncu, 2009 | strong | moderate | strong | moderate | weak | moderate | moderate |
| Bernier, 2014 | strong | moderate | strong | moderate | weak | moderate | moderate |
| Samore, 2005 | strong | strong | strong | moderate | weak | moderate | moderate |
Summary of findings of included studies measuring changes antibiotic prescribing outcomes
| First author, year | Primary outcome(s) | Change in intervention group | Change in control group | Effect size (95% CI) | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nationwide interventions ( | ||||||
| Bauraind, 2004 | change in total outpatient antibiotic sales | first campaign year: −6.5% | < 0.05 | |||
| change in total outpatient antibiotic sales | second campaign year: −3.4% | > 0.05 | ||||
| Sabuncu, 2009 | change in winter antibiotic prescribing rate (Oct to Mar) | −26.5% (−33.5% to −19.6%) | < 0.0001 | |||
| Bernier, 2014 | change in antibiotic prescribing rate | −30% (−36.3% to −23.8%) | < 0.001 | |||
| Community-level interventions ( | ||||||
| Belongia, 2005 | change in antimicrobial prescribing rate | −20.4%, | −19.8% | −0.6% | NR | |
| change in retail sales of antimicrobial drugs (grams per capita) | −17.3% | −27.4% | 10.1% | NR | ||
| Samore, 2005 | change in antibiotic prescribing rate per 100 person-years (partial intervention vs. control) | 1% | 6% | −5% | 0.03 (difference between three groups) | |
| change in antibiotic prescribing rate per 100 person-years (full intervention vs. control) | −10% | 6% | −16% | |||
| Rubin, 2005 | change in proportion of upper RTIs episodes treated with an antibiotic | −15.6% ( | −1.5% ( | −14.1% | NR | |
| Hennessy, 2002 | change in mean number of antibiotic courses per person | −31% ( | −10% ( | −21% | NR | |
| Lambert, 2007 | change in antibiotic prescribing rate | 21.7 fewer items prescribed per 1000 population | NR | −5.8% | < 0.0005 | |
| Gonzales, 2008 | net change in antibiotic dispenses per 1000 persons | – | – | −3.8% | 0.30 | |
| net change in managed care-associated antibiotic dispenses per 1000 members | – | – | −8.8% | 0.03 | ||
| Formoso, 2013 | average change in antibiotic prescribing rates for outpatient | – | – | −4.3% (−7.1% to − 1.5%) | 0.008 | |
| Site-based/household interventions ( | ||||||
| Gonzales, 1999 | change in antibiotic prescribing rate for uncomplicated acute bronchitis (limited intervention vs. control) | −5% | −2% | −3% | 0.02 (full-intervention vs. limited intervention and control) | |
| change in antibiotic prescribing rate for uncomplicated acute bronchitis (full intervention vs. control) | −26% | −2% | −24% | |||
| Gonzales, 2005 | change in antibiotic prescribing rate for adult bronchitis (intervention vs. local control) | −24% | −10% | −14% | 0.006 | |
| change in antibiotic prescribing rate for adult bronchitis (intervention vs. distal control) | −24% | −7% | −17% | < 0.002 | ||
NR, not reported.
Not reported as ITS design.
During campaign periods (Oct to Mar) 2002 to 2007.
Maximum significant decrease observed during campaign periods (Oct to Mar) 2002 to 2010.
Over winter months (Nov to Mar).