| Literature DB >> 31509204 |
James H Ford1, Lillian Vranas2, DaRae Coughlin3, Kathi M Selle2, Susan Nordman-Oliveira3, Brenda Ryther3, Tola Ewers2, Victoria L Griffin4, Anna Eslinger5, Joe Boero6, Paula Hardgrove7, Christopher J Crnich2,8.
Abstract
Importance: Suspicion of urinary tract infection (UTI) is the major driver of overuse and misuse of antibiotics in nursing homes (NHs). Effects of interventions to improve the recognition and management of UTI in NHs have been mixed, potentially owing to differences in how interventions were implemented in different studies. An improved understanding of how implementation approach influences intervention adoption is needed to achieve wider dissemination of antibiotic stewardship interventions in NHs. Objective: To compare the effects of 2 implementation strategies on the adoption and effects of a quality improvement toolkit to enhance recognition and management of UTIs in NHs. Design, Setting, and Participants: This cluster-randomized hybrid type 2 effectiveness-implementation clinical trial will be performed over a 6-month baseline (January to June 2019) and 12-month postimplementation period (July 2019 to June 2020). A minimum of 20 Wisconsin NHs with 50 or more beds will be recruited and randomized in block sizes of 2 stratified by rurality (rural vs urban). All residents who are tested and/or treated for UTI in study NHs will be included in the analysis. All study NHs will implement a quality improvement toolkit focused on enhancing the recognition and management of UTIs. Facilities will be randomized to either a usual or enhanced implementation approach based on external facilitation (coaching), collaborative peer learning, and peer comparison feedback. Enhanced implementation is hypothesized to be associated with improvements in adoption of the quality improvement toolkit and clinical outcomes. Primary outcomes of the study will include number of (1) urine cultures per 1000 resident days and (2) antibiotic prescriptions for treatment of suspected UTI per 1000 resident-days. Secondary outcomes of the study will include appropriateness of UTI treatments, treatment length, use of fluoroquinolones, and resident transfers and mortality. A mixed-methods evaluation approach will be used to assess extent and determinants of adoption of the UTI quality improvement toolkit in study NHs. Discussion: Knowledge gained during this study could help inform future efforts to implement antibiotic stewardship and quality improvement interventions in NHs. Trial Registration: ClinicalTrials.gov identifier: NCT03520010.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31509204 PMCID: PMC6739723 DOI: 10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2019.9526
Source DB: PubMed Journal: JAMA Netw Open ISSN: 2574-3805
Figure 1. Study Overview
aStratified by rurality in block sizes of 2.
Structure of the Wisconsin UTI Improvement Toolkit
| Module Name and Sections | Objectives | Tools |
|---|---|---|
Overview Clinical rationale Regulatory rationale | Provide an overview of the toolkit Explain why antibiotic stewardship matters from clinical and regulatory perspectives Educate clinicians, nursing staff, and family members of residents on appropriate management of UTIs | Slide sets and videos Staff and clinician brochure Family education brochure Family education letter and video |
Background and risk factors Appropriate indications for indwelling catheter use Indwelling catheter insertion and maintenance | Provide guidance on appropriate use and management of indwelling urinary catheters Provide guidance on how to properly collect a urine specimen from a resident with a urinary catheter | Slide sets and videos Resources on catheter insertion Resources on catheter maintenance Resources on hand hygiene |
What is a UTI? When to submit a urine specimen for testing Case studies Suggested educational plan | Provide guidance on how to reliably stratify residents into low and high risk of UTI Increase nursing staff comfort with communicating assessment findings to health care professionals and making recommendations for actions based on UTI risk Provide guidance on how to perform active monitoring for residents with a low risk of UTI | Slide sets and videos When to test nursing tool Urine testing tracking sheet Scripts for contacting health care professionals Case studies Resources to support active monitoring procedures |
When to treat? How to treat? How to modify? | Provide the rationale and benefits of active monitoring Provide guidance on antibiotic selection, dosage, and duration for treating a UTI Provide rationale and guidance for performing an antibiotic time-out after prescribing | Slide sets and videos How to treat provider tool Antibiotic time-out tool |
Overview of quality improvement and how to lead change in the organization The importance of tracking and reporting data for organizational quality improvement Sustainability of organizational change | Provide guidance for assembling an improvement team Provide examples of tools for use in the long-term care facility to help change frontline staff and clinician behavior Explain how data tracking and reporting can be used for organizational quality improvement Discuss sustainability and the importance of developing a plan to sustain improvements | Sample policy for collaborative practice agreement Sample table for collaborative practice agreement Collection of urine specimens and urine test tracking spreadsheet |
Abbreviation: UTI, urinary tract infection.
Figure 2. Wisconsin UTI Improvement Toolkit Logic Model
UTI indicates urinary tract infection.
Urinary Tract Infection Implementation Approach by Facilities
| Implementation Strategy | Implementation Strategy Description | Control | Intervention |
|---|---|---|---|
| IMUNIFI website | Online portal to general information about the IMUNIFI project and frequently asked questions about the toolkit, data entry, and feedback reports | ✓ | ✓ |
| Interactive UTI toolkit | Online access to the 5 modules of the UTI toolkit | ✓ | ✓ |
| Interactive data entry and feedback reports | Online data entry of suspected UTI line list | ✓ | ✓ |
| Individual nursing home feedback reports to track internal trends; report categories include urine cultures, antibiotic prescriptions, treatment duration, spectrum changes, and antibiograms | |||
| Ask an expert | Ability to seek ad hoc advice via email about the UTI toolkit | ✓ | ✓ |
| In-person meeting: overview | Overview of how to use the UTI toolkit | ✓ | ✓ |
| Overview of how to use and interpret facility data | |||
| Enhanced feedback reports | Benchmark comparison reports related to urine cultures, antibiotic prescriptions, treatment duration, spectrum changes, and antibiograms | ✓ | |
| In-person meeting: coaching | Overview of coaching expectations including explaining role of the coach and future interactions with the champion | ✓ | |
| Review study timeline | |||
| Overview of how to use and interpret facility benchmark data | |||
| Review the specifics of the coaching call—share template items | |||
| Coaching | Nursing homes will participate in regular coaching calls that will review data reports, process components, and facilitators and barriers to adoption of the process and develop and ongoing action plan | ✓ | |
| Collaborative learning | Quarterly webinars that will focus on interorganizational sharing of effective practices, discuss implementation barriers, and provide an opportunity to introduce new concepts or reinforce existing concepts | ✓ |
Abbreviations: IMUNIFI, Improving Management of Urinary Tract Infections in Nursing Institutions Through Facilitated Implementation Study; UTI, urinary tract infection.
Study Outcomes and Control Variables
| Domains | Measures | Data Sources |
|---|---|---|
| Outcomes | ||
| Primary clinical | Urine cultures per 1000 resident-days | Facility self-report via data submission portal |
| Antibiotic prescriptions for UTI per 1000 resident-days | ||
| Secondary clinical | Days of therapy for UTI per 1000 resident-days | Facility consultant pharmacies |
| Fluoroquinolone antibiotic prescriptions and days of therapy per 1000 resident-days | ||
| % of urine cultures meeting appropriateness criteria | Facility self-report via data submission portal | |
| % of antibiotic prescriptions for UTI meeting appropriateness criteria | ||
| % Urine cultures positive for resistant bacteria | Facility reference laboratories | |
| Number of positive | ||
| Hospital or emergency department transfers per 1000 resident-days | Facility self-report | |
| Resident deaths per 1000 resident-days | ||
| Implementation | Facility staff participation in meeting and coaching calls | Attendance and coaching call logs |
| Consistency of clinical data submission | Weblogs | |
| Use of the toolkit website | ||
| Intensity of staff and clinician education | Survey instrument administered to frontline staff | |
| Use of intervention tools | ||
| Knowledge, attitudes, and perceptions about the toolkit | ||
| Implementation barriers and facilitators | Stakeholder interviews and coaching call logs | |
| Challenges to implementation and strategies to overcome them | ||
| Facility demographic characteristics | Facility nursing staff team climate and communication | Survey instrument administered to frontline staff |
| Leadership turnover | Survey instrument administered to facility leadership staff | |
| Existing antibiotic stewardship and infection prevention activities | ||
| Bed size, ownership status, skilled nursing services provided, resident complexity, and Medicare star ratings | State and national administrative data records | |
| Staff turnover and retention rates | State of Wisconsin Consumer Information Reports |
Abbreviation: UTI, urinary tract infection.