| Literature DB >> 29157244 |
Eli Feiring1, Anne Berit Walter2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: As effective antibiotics are becoming a scarce resource, governmental regulation is needed to promote responsible use. Implementation of antibiotic stewardship and practice guidelines in health care facilities seems to be crucial to this effort. Empirical studies suggest, however, that guidelines have limited influence on health professionals' behavior and practice. Barriers and facilitators to guideline implementability are much studied, but little attention has been given to health professionals' perceptions of normative acceptability of guidelines as a condition for compliance. The aim of the present study was first, to examine if and how aspects potentially promoting acceptability and compliance among clinical target users were addressed during development of Norwegian national guidelines for antibiotic use in hospitals and second, to identify procedural characteristics of the development process that were perceived by target users to yield legitimate guidelines.Entities:
Keywords: Accountability for reasonableness; Antimicrobial resistance; Evidence-based public health; Guidelines; Implementation; Qualitative study
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29157244 PMCID: PMC5697115 DOI: 10.1186/s12913-017-2683-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Health Serv Res ISSN: 1472-6963 Impact factor: 2.655
Fig. 1Guideline acceptance: Analytical framework
Summary of results
| Domains (cf. AGREE II) | Archival data – examples of findings | Interview data – examples of quotas | Normative conditions addressed |
|---|---|---|---|
| Scope and Purpose | Guideline rationale: | “I don’t think there has been some great discussion about whether (antibiotic) guidelines are needed. There are always some who think it’s nonsense, but we know that summarizing what’s out there is good, so that one doesn’t have an unfortunate practice compared to the evidence-base”. | Guideline relevance |
| Stakeholder Involvement | Development process: Project organizing | “I believe that the process was very good because the guidelines were anchored in a wide academic environment, that is, in several disciplines. These are guidelines that all hospital doctors (….) should be aware of. And it was important that representatives, influential representatives that is, from each discipline were included, representatives appointed by the different specialist associations.” | Relevance of evidence, reasons and their foundations |
| Rigor of Development | GRADE methodology for some recommendations | “The new guidelines have a clear advantage in that they to a greater extent are evidence-based, with references, and (are the outcome of) a transparent process. The authority of the new guidelines is great, I think”. | Relevance of evidence, reasons and their foundations |
| Clarity of presentation | Recommendations presented as strongly or conditionally recommended | “I don’t think it’s good if there are changes that make our work more cumbersome, but changes that make the work easier (…) then I’m all in”. | Transparency of recommendations |
| Applicability | Electronic publication | “In everyday life you want everything to be easily available (…). I want a leaflet to have in my pocket”. | |
| Editorial independence | Guideline developed by the Norwegian Directorate of Health | “If there is something that is published on the Web by the Norwegian Directorate of Health, you think it’s updated, the latest, it is that which applies”. | Guideline relevance |