| Literature DB >> 32624002 |
Lou Atkins1, Anna Sallis2, Tim Chadborn2, Karen Shaw2, Annegret Schneider3, Susan Hopkins2, Amanda Bunten2, Susan Michie3, Fabiana Lorencatto3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Reducing the need for antibiotics is crucial in addressing the global threat of antimicrobial resistance. Catheter-associated urinary tract infection (CAUTI) is one of the most frequent device-related infections that may be amenable to prevention. Interventions implemented nationally in England target behaviours related to catheter insertion, maintenance and removal, but the extent to which they target barriers to and facilitators of these behaviours is unclear. This strategic behavioural analysis applied behavioural science frameworks to (i) identify barriers to and facilitators of behaviours that lead to CAUTI (CAUTI-related behaviours) in primary, community and secondary care and nursing homes; (ii) describe the content of nationally adopted interventions; and (iii) assess the extent to which intervention content is theoretically congruent with barriers and facilitators.Entities:
Keywords: Behaviour change techniques; Behaviour change wheel; CAUTI; Catheter-associated urinary tract infection; Strategic behavioural analysis; Theoretical domains framework; Theory
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32624002 PMCID: PMC7336619 DOI: 10.1186/s13012-020-01001-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Implement Sci ISSN: 1748-5908 Impact factor: 7.327
Fig. 1COM-B model
Fig. 2TDF domains linked to COM-B within the Behaviour Change Wheel
Summary of included studies
| Reference | Country | Disease | Participants | Behaviour | Measurement of behaviour |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Community care | |||||
| Getliffe & Newton [ | UK | Not specified | District nurses (101/129 total sample; 18 community hospital and 10 nursing home care staff) | Record keeping relating to catheter care and CAUTI | Self-report questionnaire |
| Nursing home | |||||
| Krein et al. [ | USA | Not specified | Organizational and facility leaders | Implementing ‘The Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ) Safety Program for Long-term Care: Health Care-Associated Infections/Catheter-Associated Urinary Tract Infection' | Semi-structured telephone interviews |
| Secondary care | |||||
Krein et al. [ Harrod et al. [ | USA | Not specified | Infection control nurse (42), nurse/nurse manager (25), other, e.g. quality manager (2), hospital epidemiologist or infectious diseases physician (1); prevention specialists | Implementing the ‘Bladder Bundle’ care package | Semi-structured interview |
| Alexaitis & Broome [ | USA | Neuroscience intensive care unit: common diagnoses include aneurysms, arteriovenous malformations, central nervous system neoplasms, traumatic brain injuries, spinal cord injuries, hemorrhagic and ischemic strokes, and status epilepticus. | Patients (183), nurses (107) | Discontinuation of indwelling catheters and use of bladder ultrasonography in conjunction with intermittent catheterizations | Pre-post study: catheter utilization, CAUTI rates, number of CAUTIs per month, LOS (length of stay, and cost associated with treating CAUTIs |
| Andreessen et al. [ | USA | Not specified | Male in-patients with acute indwelling urinary catheters; staff of the medical centre | Implementing evidence-based guidelines and a urinary catheter bundle (Adult Catheter Bundle) focusing on optimizing the use of urinary catheters through continual assessment and prompt catheter removal. | Pre-post study: catheter device days, compliance with urinary catheter orders, and computer documentation of continued catheter indications. |
| Apisarnthanarak et al. [ | Thailand | Not specified | Survey: general personnel; interview: lead infection preventionist | Prevention practices for CAUTI, CLABSI and VAP | Survey; interview assessing prevention practices |
| Bursle et al. [ | Australia | Not specified | Patients with urinary source bloodstream infection associated with an indwelling urinary catheter | Insertion of urinary catheter. | Case-control study: assessing risk factors for urinary catheter associated bloodstream infection |
Carter et al. [ Carter et al. [ | USA | Not specified | Staff at emergency department | Implementing a CAUTI prevention program among Emergency Departments | Qualitative comparative case study |
| Hu et al. [ | Taiwan | Not specified | 65 years or older | Insertion of urinary catheter | Prospective study: risk factors and outcomes for inappropriate use of urinary catheters |
| Conner et al. [ | USA | Not specified | Nurses | Nurse driven early catheter discontinuation; assessing a patient’s need for indwelling urinary catheterization beyond 48 h | Pre-post study: factors associated with nurses’ adoption of an evidence-based practice to reduce the duration of catheterization |
| Conway et al. [ | USA | Not specified | IPC (infection prevention control) department managers or directors | Adherence to CAUTI prevention policies | Cross-sectional survey on presence of CAUTI prevention policies, adherence to policies, CAUTI incidence rates |
| Crouzet et al. [ | France | Not specified | Five hospital departments (not specified further) | Reducing the duration of the catheterisation | Non-random intervention study: duration of catheterisation, late CAUTI frequency |
| Dugyon-Escalante et al. [ | USA | Not specified | Patients in intensive care units | Managing catheter use by multidisciplinary teams | Number of CAUTI cases and infection rates: pre-post |
| Fakih et al. [ | USA | Not specified | Patients in medical-surgical units | Unnecessary use of urinary catheters | Quasi-experimental study with a control group: reduction in the rate of UC utilization |
| Fakih et al. [ | USA | Not specified | Nurse and physician champions. Nurses caring for the patients. Other healthcare workers (e.g. infection preventionist, quality manager, safety officer, utilization manager) | Urinary catheter use and appropriateness of the indication for use (accountability at the unit level). | Symptomatic National Healthcare Safety Network (NHSN) CAUTI rate and population-based CAUTI rate. AHRQ's Hospital Survey on Patient Safety Culture administered both at baseline and 15 months later to evaluate changes in patient safety culture over time. Readiness assessment per unit at the beginning of the project and team check-up tool quarterly to report on progress with the implementation of CUSP principles and barriers |
| Gupta et al. [ | USA | Not specified (ICU patients) | MICU medical director, MICU fellows, nurse managers and an infection control nurse | 1. Restricting IUC use to a limited list of predetermined indications. 2. Physicians and nurses were required to discontinue urinary catheters in all patients on admission unless warranted. 3. Narrowing down the criteria for urinary catheter utilization to urinary retention and genitourinary procedures only. 4. Use of sonographic bladder scanning to identify high-risk patients who may need indwelling catheters in the near future | IUC utilization ratio (number of urinary catheter days/patient days) and catheter-associated urinary tract infection (CAUTI) rates (number of CAUTI infections in a particular location or number of urinary catheter days in a particular location × 1000) |
| Mann et al. [ | Canada | Not specified (intensive care units and rehabilitation unit) | Intensive care and rehabilitation unit nurses | Compliance with CAUTI prevention measures (Foley maintenance) | Compliance with the following evidence-based practices: catheter securement, tamper evident seal (TES) intact, absence of dependent loop, catheter below bladder level, drainage bag not touching floor and drainage bag not overfilled |
| Murphy et al. [ | UK | Not specified (ED, medical assessment unit, cardiology wards, and older people’s acute medicine wards) | 8 nurses and 22 physicians in retrospective think aloud - RTA interviews. 20 of these (not specified how many nurses/physicians) also took part in a semi-structured interview | Decision making regarding IUC placement | 30 RTA interviews and 20 semi-structured interviews |
| Patrizzi et al. [ | USA | Not specified (ED and inpatient units) | ED nurses | Implementing a nurse-driven protocol to reduce CAUTI: Emergency department behaviours: 1. Removing direct access to catheters by placing them centrally in a supply closet instead of in each bedside supply cart. 2. Only storing 14F catheters (and no larger ones) in the supply closet as risk of infection increases with size. 3. Adding intermittent urinary catheterization kits to the supply closet as an alternative. 4. Education (e.g., The PPMC ‘UTI Bundle’ mandatory education day). 5. Availability of a bladder scanner. 6. New order set for indwelling urinary catheterization that lists 5 different indications to justify catheter placement (following hospital policy) instead of the previous ‘Foley catheter insertion’ order. 7. Collaboratively discussion between physician and nurse if the latter feels the insertion does not meet the established criteria. Inpatient unit behaviours: 1. Monitoring sheet placed on each patient’s medical record. 2. Daily assessment of a. necessity and b. standards for managing the catheter are being kept (e.g. bag below level of bladder) | Percentage of patients admitted from ER with indwelling urinary catheters |
| Smith L et al. [ | USA | Not specified | Burn ICU nurses | Insertion, maintenance and removal of urinary catheters. | CAUTI rates and catheter utilization rates |
| Tertiary care | |||||
| Fakih et al. [ | USA | Not specified | EPs and resident staff in ED | Adherence to guidelines for urinary catheter placement | Data on urinary catheter presence on emergency department arrival, placement of a urinary catheter in the emergency department, documentation of a physician order for urinary catheter placement, reasons for placement, and compliance with the indications were collected retrospectively reviewing the emergency department records |
| Trautner et al. [ | USA | Not specified | 169 physicians | Management of catheter-associated urine cultures | Self-report questionnaire |
| Kolonoski et al. [ | USA | Not specified (post-acute units patients) | Physicians and nurses | Implementation of quality improvement programme to reduce CAUTI | Interview and point prevalence survey of Foley catheter use |
Fig. 3Map of CAUTI-related behaviours
Ranking of TDF domain importance according to the frequency of identification, thematic elaboration and evidence of conflicting beliefs
| Ranking | TDF domain (COM-B) | Frequency (no. of studies identified in; max | Elaboration (number of themes) | Evidence of barriers and/or facilitators within domains (Yes/No) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Environmental context and resources (physical opportunity) | 13 | 8 | Yes |
| 2 | Knowledge (psychological capability) | 12 | 9 | Yes |
| 3 | Beliefs about consequences (reflective motivation) | 12 | 8 | Yes |
| 4 | Social Influences (social opportunity) | 9 | 6 | Yes |
| 5 | Memory, attention and decision processes (psychological capability) | 8 | 8 | Yes |
| 6 | Social professional role and identity (reflective motivation) | 6 | 4 | Yes |
| 7 | Behavioural regulation | 3 | 2 | Yes |
| 8 | Beliefs about capabilities | 2 | 2 | No |
| Joint 9th and 10th | Skills | 2 | 1 | No |
| Goals | 2 | 1 | No | |
| Joint 11th –14th | Reinforcement | 0 | 0 | – |
| Intentions | 0 | 0 | – | |
| Optimism | 0 | 0 | – | |
| Emotions | 0 | 0 | – |
Classification of TDF domains as barriers, facilitators, or both across care settings
Fig. 4Frequency of identification of intervention functions
Fig. 5Frequency of identification of BCTs across interventions
Theoretical congruence between BCTs and TDF domains
| BCT | Frequency | Linked TDF domains according to integrated linking matrix | TDF domain importance ranking | Theoretical congruence between BCT and domain |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Feedback (on outcome of behaviour) | 3 | Knowledge | 2 | High |
| Beliefs about consequences | 3 | |||
| Beliefs about capabilities | 8 | |||
| Goals | 9–10 | |||
| Feedback (on behaviour) | 3 | Knowledge | 2 | High |
| Beliefs about consequences | 3 | |||
| Beliefs about capabilities | 8 | |||
| Goals | 9–10 | |||
| Self-monitoring (behaviour) | 5 | Memory, attention, decision processes | 5 | High |
| Behavioural regulation | 7 | |||
| Skills | 9 | |||
| Beliefs about consequences | 3 | |||
| Beliefs about capabilities | 8 | |||
| Self-monitoring (outcomes behaviour) | 3 | Memory, attention, decision processes | 5 | High |
| Behavioural regulation | 7 | |||
| Skills | 9 | |||
| Beliefs about consequences | 3 | |||
| Beliefs about capabilities | 8 | |||
| Social support (practical) | 4 | Social influences | 4 | High |
| Beliefs about capabilities | 8 | |||
| Social professional role and identity | 6 | |||
| Intentions | 11–14 | |||
| Goals | 9–10 | |||
| Information about health consequences | 9 | Knowledge | 2 | High |
| Beliefs about consequences | 3 | |||
| Information about social environmental consequences | 4 | Knowledge | 2 | High |
| Beliefs about consequences | 3 | |||
| Prompts/cues | 1 | Memory, attention, decision processes | 5 | High |
| Environmental context and resources | 1 | |||
| Behavioural regulation | 7 | |||
| Restructuring the social environment | 1 | Social influences | 6 | High |
| Environmental context and resources | 1 | |||
| Action planning | 1 | Goals | 9–10 | Med |
| Intentions | 11–14 | |||
| Memory, attention, decision processes | 5 | |||
| Behavioural regulation | 7 | |||
| Information about emotional consequences | 1 | Knowledge | 2 | Med |
| Emotions | 11–14 | |||
| Social comparison | 1 | Social influences | 4 | Med |
| Demonstration of the behaviour | 2 | Social influences | 4 | Med |
| Skills | 9 | |||
| Credible source | 3 | Beliefs about consequences | 3 | Med |
| Goals | 9–10 | |||
| Intentions | 11–14 | |||
| Identification of self as a role model | 1 | Social influences | 4 | Med |
| Goal-setting (behaviour) | 4 | Behavioural regulation | 7 | Low |
| Skills | 9 | |||
| Beliefs about capabilities | 8 | |||
| Goals | 9–10 | |||
| Intentions | 11–14 | |||
| Goal-setting (outcome) | 1 | Behavioural regulation | 7 | Low |
| Skills | ||||
| Beliefs about capabilities | 8 | |||
| Goals | 9–10 | |||
| Intentions | 11–14 | |||
| Review behaviour goal(s) | 1 | Goals | 9–10 | Low |
| Intentions | 11–14 | |||
| Discrepancy between current behaviour and goal(s) | 2 | None | n/a | Low |
| Monitoring of outcome of behaviour by others without feedback | 1 | Skills | 9 | Low |
| Monitoring of the behaviour by others without feedback | 3 | Skills | 9 | Low |
| Instruction on how to perform the behaviour | 10 | None | N/A | Low |
| Reward (outcome) | 1 | Skills | 9 | Low |
| Reinforcement | 11–14 | |||
| Goals | 9–10 | |||
| Intentions | 11–14 | |||
| Behavioural practice/rehearsal | 2 | Skills | 9 | Low |
| Beliefs about capabilities | 8 |
aMerged matrix combing Cane et al. [19] and Michie et al. [6] TDF x BCT linking matrices
bDomain ranking based on thematic analysis of barrier/facilitator literature (see Table 2)
cClassification of theoretical congruence: Low: BCT is not paired with any of the 6 key domains identified as important in the thematic analysis; Medium: BCT is paired with at least one domain identified as important; High: BCT is paired with two or more domains identified as important
Seized and missed opportunities: intervention functions
Seized and missed opportunities: policy categories
Recommendations for intervention design and refinement
| Theme | Proposed new BCT | Example delivery to address theme |
|---|---|---|
| Environmental context and resources | ||
| Limited and inconsistent documentation and records | Restructuring the physical environment; prompts/cues | Creating standardised computer-based documentation requiring staff to enter reason for catheterisation, date of insertion, etc. (i.e. not circumvent system by leaving fields blank). |
| Transitions of care | Restructuring the social environment | Creating the rule that ward staff transferring patients to another ward check with the staff receiving the patient whether catheterisation is necessary (this rule could be prompted by a checklist for transfer of patients to another ward/hospital or home where staff check if the catheter is needed). |
| Lack of time to perform alternatives to urinary catheterisation | Adding objects to the environment | Provision of condom catheters, female urination devices and/or local commodes at bedside. |
| Knowledge | ||
| Lack of knowledge of clinical guidelines and local procedural documents | Information to consider including in guidelines/local procedural documents: • Alternatives to catheterisation • How to safely manage infections arising from catheterisation? Whilst the information contained in the guidelines appears to address lack of knowledge in, e.g. link between catheter duration and CAUTI, the issue may be more to do with dissemination. Guideline implementation strategies to accompany recommendations may promote this. | |
| Beliefs about consequences | ||
| Convenience and ease of monitoring | Anticipated regret and/or salience of consequences | Getting staff to think about how they would feel if a patient was diagnosed with CAUTI after they had catheterised them for non-medical reasons (this could be delivered as part of a training programme, staff meetings, printed and electronic materials). |
| Pros and Cons | Encouraging staff to list the benefits and disadvantages of catheterising for convenience compared with catheterising for medical reasons (this could be delivered as a part of a training programme or suggested face to face in staff). | |
| Salience of consequences | Providing images emphasising the severity of CAUTI. | |
| Persuasive communication (Credible source) | Members of Trust leadership and senior members of staff endorsing not catheterising for convenience. | |
| Social influences | ||
| Requests from patients and their carers | Social comparison | Staff convey to patients/carers that most patients/carers do not request catheters and explain the reason why this is. |
| Demonstration of the behaviour | Staff role modelling challenging patient/carer requests. | |
| Lack of peer support and buy-in | Information about others’ approval | Informing staff engagement with CAUTI-reducing practices is encouraged by peers/senior staff. |
| Physicians dictate nurses’ practice | Restructuring the social environment | Strategies to empower nurses to lead on catheter decision-making (delivered through peers/senior team members). |
| Social comparison | Provide examples of where the HOUDINI protocol has been effectively implemented. | |
| Cultural norms regarding standard catheterisation practice for specific patient groups | Social comparison | Compare rates of catheterisation and corresponding rates of infection between wards/hospitals/primary care practices/nursing homes. Stratifying by professional role will increase the salience of this comparison. |
| Memory attention and decision processes | ||
| Pre-empting subsequent urinary catheterisation | Action planning | Plan who will assess the patient for catheterisation and where this will happen |
| Self-monitoring of behaviour | Document the action plan (see above) so there is agreement between staff on different wards whether the patient being transferred requires a catheter and if so, who will insert the catheter. | |