| Literature DB >> 32059746 |
Gabriel Birgand1,2, Nico T Mutters3,4, Raheelah Ahmad5,6, Evelina Tacconelli3,7,8, Jean-Christophe Lucet3,9,10, Alison Holmes5,3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Using case-vignettes, we assessed the perception of European infection control (IC) specialists regarding the individual and collective risk associated with antimicrobial resistance (AMR) among inpatients.Entities:
Keywords: Antimicrobial resistance; Carbapenemase-producing Acinetobacter baumannii; Carbapenemase-producing Enterobacteriaceae; Carbapenemase-producing Pseudomonas aeruginosa; Europe; Infection prevention and control; Meticillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus; Risk perception; Vancomycin-resistant Enterococci
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32059746 PMCID: PMC7023755 DOI: 10.1186/s13756-020-0695-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Antimicrob Resist Infect Control ISSN: 2047-2994 Impact factor: 4.887
Distribution of participants, case-vignettes quoted and questionnaires completed in each of the 15 European countries
| Countries | Number of participants, N (%) | Number of case-vignettes quoted, N (%) |
|---|---|---|
| Austria | 7 (5) | 35 (5) |
| Finland | 5 (3) | 21 (3) |
| France | 16 (11) | 80 (12) |
| Germany | 10 (7) | 41 (6) |
| Greece | 14 (9) | 61 (9) |
| Hungary | 10 (7) | 42 (6) |
| Ireland | 8 (5) | 30 (5) |
| Israel | 8 (5) | 39 (6) |
| Netherlands | 6 (4) | 16 (2) |
| Portugal | 7 (5) | 18 (3) |
| Serbia | 13 (9) | 53 (8) |
| Spain | 15 (10) | 75 (11) |
| Turkey | 10 (7) | 50 (8) |
| UK | 12 (8) | 56 (9) |
| Ukraine | 8 (5) | 38 (6) |
| Total | 149 (100) | 655 (100) |
Proportion among the 149 European IC specialists perceiving a high individual and collective risk to patients globally and by type of multidrug-resistant organisms
Footnotes:
Individual risk corresponds to the risk of poor clinical outcomes for infected/colonised patients; collective risk corresponds to the risk for contact patients to become colonised and the transmission to other patients. N represents the total number of case-vignettes scored
Colours relate to the percentage of participants selecting the item where red = 0% of selection, yellow = 50% and green = 100% of selection by participants
Abbreviations: IC Infection control, MRSA Methicillin resistant Staphylococcus aureus, ESBL-PE Extended spectrum betalactamase producing Enterobacteriaceae, CPE Carbapenemase producing Enterobacteriaceae, KPC Klebsiella pneumoniae carbapenemase, CR-Ab Carbapenem-resistant Acinetaobacter baumannii, VRE Vancomycin resistant Enterococci, CR-Pa Carbapenemase Resistant-Pseudomonas aeruginosa
Fig. 1Overall assessment of agreement about risk perception within and across 15 European countries. Footnote: Individual risk corresponds to the risk of poor clinical outcomes for infected/colonised patients; collective risk corresponds to the risk for contact patients to become colonised and the transmission to other patients. N represents the total number of case-vignettes scored. The risk perception was scored on a 7-point Likert scale and then categorized in low risk for scores 1 to 3, neutral for a score of 4 and high risk for scores 5 to 7. Poor agreement: ICC < 0.4, Good agreement: ICC 0.4 to 0.7, Very good agreement: ICC > 0.7. Abbreviations: ICC, intraclass correlation; CI, confidence interval; UK, United Kingdom
Factors associated with the risk perception to infected/colonised cases of antimicrobial resistance
| Population-based variables | Individual risk | Collective risk | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Number of participants with a Low/Neutral-risk perceptiona | Number of participants with a High-risk perceptiona | Univariate analysis ( | Number of participants with a Low/Neutral-risk perceptiona | Number of participants with a High-risk perceptiona | Univariate analysis ( | |
| Participants years of practice as an IPC specialist ( | ||||||
| < 5 | 3 (7) | 13 (15) | 0.10 | 5 (12) | 11 (13) | 1.00 |
| ≥ 5 | 48 (94) | 64 (83) | 38 (88) | 874 (87) | ||
| Type of healthcare facility of participants ( | ||||||
| Private hospitals | 1 (2) | 1 (1) | 0.86 | 0 (0) | 2 (2) | 0.34 |
| Public general hospital | 24 (47) | 40 (52) | 25 (58) | 39 (46) | ||
| University hospital | 26 (51) | 36 (47) | 18 (42) | 44 (52) | ||
| Number of acute care beds ( | ||||||
| < 300 | 13 (25) | 16 (21) | 0.72 | 10 (23) | 19 (22) | 0.97 |
| 300–600 | 11 (22) | 21 (27) | 10 (23) | 22 (26) | ||
| ≥ 600 | 27 (53) | 40 (52) | 23 (54) | 44 (52) | ||
| Epidemiology of MDROs the year prior the study | ||||||
| Local number of MDRO bacteremia in 2015a, ( | ||||||
| 0 | 42 (19) | 64 (26) | 15 (13) | 91 (26) | ||
| 1-≤ 10 | 81 (37) | 107 (44) | 45 (38) | 143 (41) | ||
| > 10 | 94 (43) | 74 (30) | 57 (49) | 111 (32) | ||
| National invasive infections, Resistant isolate % ( | ||||||
| < 1% | 33 (14) | 60 (23) | 10 (9) | 83 (23) | < | |
| 1-< 5% | 24 (10) | 38 (15) | 7 (5) | 55 (15) | ||
| 5-< 10% | 13 (6) | 25 (10) | 11 (9) | 27 (7) | ||
| 10-< 25% | 59 (25) | 41 (16) | 39 (30) | 61 (17) | ||
| 25-< 50% | 32 (14) | 35 (13) | 21 (16) | 46 (13) | ||
| 50-< 75% | 14 (6) | 6 (2) | 5 (4) | 15 (4) | ||
| ≥ 75% | 59 (25) | 56 (21) | 35 (27) | 80 (22) | ||
| Local IPC organisation | ||||||
| Low level | 27 (53) | 49 (64) | 0.22 | 22 (51) | 54 (64) | 0.18 |
| High level | 24 (47) | 28 (36) | 21 (49) | 31 (36) | ||
| Individual cognitive factors for compliance with AMR control measures | ||||||
| Low level | 34 (67) | 46 (60) | 0.42 | 27 (63) | 53 (62) | 0.96 |
| High level | 17 (33) | 31 (40) | 16 (37) | 32 (38) | ||
| Perception of the organization and work conditions in participants hospital | ||||||
| Teamwork | ||||||
| Low level | 43 (84) | 56 (73) | 0.12 | 34 (79) | 65 (76) | 0.74 |
| High level | 8 (16) | 21 (27) | 9 (21) | 20 (24) | ||
| Perception of management | ||||||
| Low level | 42 (82) | 54 (70) | 0.12 | 33 (77) | 63 (74) | 0.75 |
| High level | 9 (18) | 23 (30) | 10 (23) | 22 (26) | ||
| Stress and chaos | ||||||
| Low level | 41 (80) | 60 (78) | 0.74 | 37 (86) | 64 (75) | 0.16 |
| High level | 10 (20) | 17 (22) | 6 (14) | 21 (25) | ||
| Well-being and work conditions | ||||||
| Low level | 37 (73) | 53 (69) | 0.65 | 31 (72) | 59 (69) | 0.75 |
| High level | 14 (27) | 24 (31) | 12 (28) | 26 (31) | ||
| National socio-cultural factors | ||||||
| Power Distance | ||||||
| Low level | 36 (71) | 59 (77) | 0.44 | 28 (65) | 67 (79) | 0.09 |
| High level | 15 (29) | 18 (23) | 15 (35) | 18 (21) | ||
| Uncertainty Avoidance | ||||||
| Low level | 41 (80) | 55 (71) | 0.25 | 32 (74) | 64 (75) | 0.91 |
| High level | 10 (20) | 22 (29) | 11 (26) | 21 (25) | ||
| Individualism | ||||||
| Low level | 33 (65) | 57 (74) | 0.26 | 28 (65) | 62 (73) | 0.36 |
| High level | 18 (35) | 20 (26) | 15 (35) | 23 (27) | ||
| Masculinity | ||||||
| Low level | 34 (67) | 54 (70) | 0.68 | 24 (60) | 64 (75) | 0.02 |
| High level | 17 (33) | 23 (30) | 19 (40) | 21 (25) | ||
| Socio-economic factors | ||||||
| GDP per capita | ||||||
| Low level | 41 (80) | 63 (82) | 0.84 | 33 (80) | 71 (84) | 0.35 |
| High level | 10 (20) | 14 (18) | 10 (20) | 14 (16) | ||
| Health expenditure per capita | ||||||
| Low level | 27 (53) | 50 (65) | 0.17 | 18 (42) | 59 (69) | |
| High level | 24 (47) | 27 (35) | 25 (58) | 26 (31) | ||
Footnotes:
Individual risk corresponds to the risk of poor clinical outcomes for infected/colonised patients; collective risk corresponds to the risk for contact patients to become colonised and the transmission to other patients
aLow/Neutral-risk perception: Mean Scores = 1–5; High-risk perception: Mean Scores = 6–7
Power distance index (PDI): The power distance index is defined as “the extent to which the less powerful members of organizations and institutions accept and expect that power is distributed unequally”. A higher degree of the Index indicates that hierarchy is clearly established and executed in society, without doubt or reason. A lower degree of the Index signifies that people question authority and attempt to distribute power
Uncertainty avoidance (UAI): The uncertainty avoidance index is defined as “a society’s tolerance for ambiguity”, in which people embrace or avert an event of something unexpected, unknown, or away from the status quo. Societies that score a high degree in this index opt for stiff codes of behaviour, guidelines, laws, and generally rely on absolute truth, or the belief that one lone truth dictates everything and people know what it is. A lower degree in this index shows more acceptance of differing thoughts or ideas
Individualism vs. collectivism (IDV): This index explores the “degree to which people in a society are integrated into groups”. Individualistic societies have loose ties that often only relate an individual to his/her immediate family. They emphasize the “I” versus the “we”. Its counterpart, collectivism, describes a society in which tightly-integrated relationships tie extended families and others into in-groups. These in-groups are laced with undoubted loyalty and support each other when a conflict arises with another in-group
Masculinity vs. femininity (MAS): In this dimension, masculinity is defined as “a preference in society for achievement, heroism, assertiveness and material rewards for success”. In feminine societies, they share modest and caring views equally with men. In more masculine societies, women are somewhat assertive and competitive, but notably less than men. In other words, they still recognize a gap between male and female values
Abbreviations: MDRO Multi-drug resistant organisms, IPC Infection prevention and control