| Literature DB >> 28293145 |
Christine E Kistler1, Anna Beeber2, Sylvia Becker-Dreps3, Kimberly Ward4, Megan Meade5, Brittany Ross5, Philip D Sloane1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Antibiotic overuse causes antibiotic resistance, one of the most important threats to human health. Older adults, particularly those in nursing homes, often receive antibiotics when they are not indicated.Entities:
Keywords: Infection management; Nursing homes; Older adults; Primary care
Year: 2017 PMID: 28293145 PMCID: PMC5346252 DOI: 10.1186/s12912-017-0203-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Nurs ISSN: 1472-6955
Sample clinical vignettes: conditions for which antibiotics are generally not recommended
| Condition | Respondent group | |
|---|---|---|
| Nursing home nurses | Community-dwelling older adults | |
| Asymptomatic bacteriuria vignettes | Mrs. Jones is an 83 year old woman with left-sided weakness from a stroke. Your medical assistant informs you that “she has really smelly urine.” At her baseline, she is incontinent of bowel and bladder and non-ambulatory. Her functional status is unchanged, her temperature is 97.8 F, her other vital signs are normal, and she appears to otherwise be in her usual state of health except for her smelly urine. | Mrs. Jones is an 83 year old woman who thinks her urine is more smelly lately. At her baseline, she has occasional urinary incontinence, uses a wheelchair to get around after she had a stroke, and has a hard time getting to the bathroom because it. She doesn’t have a fever, and she appears to otherwise be in her usual state of health except for her smelly urine. |
| Upper respiratory infection vignettes | Mrs. Smith is a 91 year old woman with moderate dementia and heart failure. You notice she has a cough, runny nose, and low grade fever, but otherwise seems well. Her appetite is still good, her last recorded temperature was 97.4, her other vital signs are normal. | Mrs. Smith is a 91 year old woman with a little memory trouble and heart failure. She starts to have a cough, runny nose, and low grade fever, after a visit with her family, but otherwise seems well with no trouble breathing. She is eating and drinking fine and hasn’t had a high fever. |
| Wound vignettes | Mr. Jones is an 82 year old with long-standing diabetes. He had a witnessed fall while standing and scraped his forearm catching himself from his fall. He is otherwise uninjured and did not hit his head. He is able to ambulate immediately thereafter and the wound is a superficial skin tear without deep tissue injury. | Mr. Jones is an 82 year old with diabetes for a long time. He fell when getting up from breakfast this morning and scraped his forearm catching himself from his fall. He is otherwise uninjured and did not hit his head. He can walk without any trouble after the fall. The scrape is not very deep, just a scratch barely through the skin, bleeding a little bit. |
Participant characteristics, n (%)
| Participant characteristics | Nurses ( | Older adults ( |
|---|---|---|
| Age, mean ± SD | 43 ± 13 | 72 ± 6 |
| Female | 27 (87%) | 41 (62%) |
| Race | ||
| White or Caucasian | 11 (35%) | 51 (77%) |
| Black or African-American | 16 (52%) | 13 (20%) |
| Asian-American | 4 (13%) | 1 (2%) |
| Other | 0 | 1 (2%) |
| Educational status | ||
| Some high school or less | 0 | 12 (18%) |
| 12th Grade Graduation or GED | 0 | 15 (23%) |
| Some College or Associate’s Degree, including LPN | 15 (48%) | 13 (20%) |
| College Degree, including Bachelor’s of Nursing | 15 (48%) | 10 (15%) |
| Masters, PhD, JD, or MD, including Masters of Nursing | 1 (3%) | 16 (24%) |
| Antibiotics in the past 6 months | 4 (13%) | 20 (30%) |
| Marital status (community sample only) | ||
| Married/Partnered | -- | 35 (53%) |
| Widowed | -- | 19 (29%) |
| Divorced | -- | 10 (15%) |
| Never married | -- | 2 (3%) |
| Self-reported health status (community sample only) | ||
| Excellent | -- | 8 (12%) |
| Very good | -- | 16 (24%) |
| Good | -- | 28 (42%) |
| Fair | -- | 13 (19%) |
| Poor | -- | 1 (2%) |
| Years nursing experience (nurse sample only) | ||
| Less than 2 years | 5 (16%) | -- |
| 2–5 years | 5 (16%) | -- |
| 6–10 years | 4 (13%) | -- |
| 11–15 years | 1 (3%) | -- |
| 16–20 years | 4 (13%) | -- |
| Greater than 20 years | 12 (39%) | -- |
| Years worked at site (nurse sample only) | ||
| Less than a year | 13 (42%) | -- |
| 1–2 years | 8 (26%) | -- |
| 3–5 years | 7 (23%) | -- |
| 6–10 years | 2 (6%) | -- |
| 11–15 years | 0 (0%) | -- |
| Greater than 15 years | 1 (3%) | -- |
Responses to nursing home nurses and community-dwelling older persons to questions about the management of suspected infections, n (%)
| Quantitative responses | Nurses ( | Older adults ( | P-value* |
|---|---|---|---|
| Knowledge- Are you aware of any health dangers to yourself or other people associated with taking antibiotics?a | |||
| Aware | 22 (71%) | 45 (69%) | 1.0 |
| Attitude- When I have a cold, I should take antibiotics to prevent getting a more serious illness. | |||
| Strongly disagree or disagree | 29 (94%) | 51 (77%) | 0.003 |
| Neutral | 0 | 3 (5%) | |
| Strongly agree or agree | 2 (6%) | 12 (18%) | |
| Attitude- When I get a cold, antibiotics help me to get better more quickly. | |||
| Strongly disagree or disagree | 25 (81%) | 46 (70%) | 0.698 |
| Neutral | 2 (6%) | 4 (6%) | |
| Strongly agree or agree | 4 (13%) | 16 (24%) | |
| Attitude- By the time I am sick enough to talk to or visit a doctor because of a cold, I usually expect a prescription for antibioticsb | |||
| Strongly disagree or disagree | 12 (39%) | 39 (59%) | 0.069 |
| Neutral | 6 (19%) | 9 (14%) | |
| Strongly agree or agree | 12 (39%) | 18 (28%) | |
| Behaviors- Did not perceive need for an antibiotic in the: | |||
| Asymptomatic bacteriuria vignette | 24 (77%) | 33 (50%) | 0.008 |
| Viral upper respiratory vignette | 27 (87%) | 38 (58%) | <0.001 |
| Wound vignettea | 30 (97%) | 48 (74%) | 0.016 |
*Statistical method used = Fisher’s Exact
a n = 30 for the nurses survey
b n = 65 for the older adults survey