| Literature DB >> 33441352 |
Jean-Paul R Soucy1, Marcelo Low2, Kamal Raj Acharya3, Moriah Ellen4, Anette Hulth5, Sonja Löfmark5, Gary E Garber6,7, William Watson8,9, Jacob Moran-Gilad10, David N Fisman1, Derek R MacFadden11.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Antimicrobial resistance undermines our ability to treat bacterial infections, leading to longer hospital stays, increased morbidity and mortality, and a mounting burden to the healthcare system. Antimicrobial stewardship is increasingly important to safeguard the efficacy of existing drugs, as few new drugs are in the developmental pipeline. While significant progress has been made with respect to stewardship in hospitals, relatively little progress has been made in the primary care setting, where the majority of antimicrobials are prescribed. OPEN Stewardship is an international collaboration to develop an automated feedback platform to improve responsible antimicrobial prescribing among primary care physicians and capable of being deployed across heterogeneous healthcare settings. We describe the protocol for an evaluation of this automated feedback intervention with two main objectives: assessing changes in antimicrobial prescribing among participating physicians and determining the usability and usefulness of the reports. METHODS AND ANALYSIS: A non-randomised evaluation of the automated feedback intervention (OPEN Stewardship) will be conducted among approximately 150 primary care physicians recruited from Ontario, Canada and Southern Israel, based on a series of targeted stewardship messages sent using the platform. Using a controlled interrupted time-series analysis and multilevel negative binomial modelling, we will compare the antimicrobial prescribing rates of participants before and after the intervention, and also to the prescribing rates of non-participants (from the same healthcare network) during the same period. We will examine outcomes targeted by the stewardship messages, including prescribing for antimicrobials with duration longer than 7 days and prescribing for indications where antimicrobials are typically unnecessary. Participants will also complete a series of surveys to determine the usability and usefulness of the stewardship reports. ETHICS AND DISSEMINATION: All sites have obtained ethics committee approval to recruit providers and access anonymised prescribing data. Dissemination will occur through open-access publication, stakeholder networks and national/international meetings. © Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2021. Re-use permitted under CC BY. Published by BMJ.Entities:
Keywords: epidemiology; infectious diseases; primary care; public health
Year: 2021 PMID: 33441352 PMCID: PMC7812099 DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2020-039810
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Open ISSN: 2044-6055 Impact factor: 2.692