Abstract
AbstractObjective:To evaluate the effectiveness of Carolinas Healthcare Outpatient Antimicrobial Stewardship Empowerment Network (CHOSEN), a multicomponent outpatient stewardship program to reduce inappropriate antibiotic prescribing for upper respiratory infections by 20% over 2 years.Design:Before-and-after interrupted time series of antibiotics prescribed between 2 periods: April 2016–October 2017 and May 2018–March 2020.Setting:The study included 162 primary-care practices within a large healthcare system in the greater Charlotte, North Carolina region.Participants:Adult and pediatric patients with encounters for upper respiratory infections for which an antibiotic is inappropriate.Methods:Patient and provider educational materials, along with a web-based provider prescribing dashboard aimed at reducing inappropriate antibiotic prescribing were developed and distributed. Monthly antibiotic prescribing rates were calculated as the number of eligible encounters with an antibiotic prescribed divided by the total number of eligible encounters. A segmented regression analysis compared monthly antibiotic prescribing rates before versus after CHOSEN implementation, while also accounting for practice type and seasonal trends in prescribing.Results:Overall, 286,580 antibiotics were prescribed during 704,248 preintervention encounters and 277,177 during 832,200 intervention encounters. Significant reductions in inappropriate prescribing rates were observed in all outpatient specialties: family medicine (relative difference before and after the intervention, −20.4%), internal medicine (−19.5%), pediatric medicine (−17.2%), and urgent care (−16.6%).Conclusions:A robust multimodal intervention that combined a provider prescribing dashboard with a targeted education campaign demonstrated significant decreases in inappropriate outpatient antibiotic prescribing for upper respiratory tract infections in a large integrated ambulatory network.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Microbiology (medical),Epidemiology
Reference41 articles.
1. 24. New antimicrobial stewardship standard. The Joint Commission website. www.jointcommission.org/-/media/enterprise/tjc/imported-resource-assets/documents/new_antimicrobial_stewardship_standardpdf.pdf?db=web&hash=69307456CCE435B134854392C7FA7D76&hash=69307456CCE435B134854392C7FA7D76. Published 2016. Accessed July 30, 2021.
2. 26. The National Committee for Quality Assurance. Proposed changes to existing measures for HEDIS 1 2020: appropriate antibiotic use measures. www.ncqa.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/02/20190208_10_Antibiotics.pdf. Published 2020. Accessed July 30, 2021.
3. Effect of Antibiotic-Prescribing Feedback to High-Volume Primary Care Physicians on Number of Antibiotic Prescriptions
4. Evaluation of a multifaceted approach to antimicrobial stewardship education methods for medical residents
5. Outcomes of an ambulatory care pharmacist-led antimicrobial stewardship program within a family medicine resident clinic
Cited by
8 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献