Evaluation of an automated feedback intervention to improve antibiotic prescribing among primary care physicians (OPEN Stewardship): a multinational controlled interrupted time-series study

Author:

Soucy Jean-Paul R.1ORCID,Low Marcelo2,Acharya Kamal R.3,Ellen Moriah4,Hulth Anette5,Löfmark Sonja5,Garber Gary E.6,Watson William7,Moran-Gilad Jacob8,Davidovitch Nadav4,Amar Tamar9,McCready Janine10,Orava Matthew711,Brownstein John S.12,Brown Kevin A.16ORCID,Fisman David N.1,MacFadden Derek R.13ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Division of Epidemiology, Dalla Lana School of Public Health, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada

2. Chief Physician’s Office, Clalit Health Services, Tel Aviv, Israel

3. Department of Population Medicine, University of Guelph Ontario Veterinary College, Guelph, Ontario, Canada

4. Department of Health Policy and Management, Guilford Glazer Faculty of Business and Management and Faculty of Health Sciences, Ben-Gurion University of the Negev, Beer Sheva, Israel

5. The Public Health Agency of Sweden, Stockholm, Sweden

6. Public Health Ontario, Toronto, Ontario, Canada

7. Department of Family and Community Medicine, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada

8. Department of Health Policy and Management, School of Public Health, Faculty of Health Sciences, Ben-Gurion University of the Negev, Beer Sheva, Israel

9. Department of Epidemiology, Biostatistics, and Community Health Sciences, Ben-Gurion University of the Negev, Beer Sheva, Israel

10. Division of Infectious Diseases, Department of Medicine, Michael Garron Hospital, Toronto, Ontario, Canada

11. Barrie and Community Family Health Team, Barrie, Ontario, Canada

12. Computational Epidemiology Lab, Boston Children’s Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts, USA

13. Clinical Epidemiology Program, The Ottawa Hospital Research Institute, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada

Abstract

ABSTRACT Tools to advance antimicrobial stewardship in the primary health care setting, where most antimicrobials are prescribed, are urgently needed. The aim of this study was to evaluate OPEN Stewarship (Online Platform for Expanding aNtibiotic Stewardship), an automated feedback intervention, among a cohort of primary care physicians. We performed a controlled, interrupted time-series study of 32 intervention and 725 control participants, consisting of primary care physicians from Ontario, Canada and Southern Israel, from October 2020 to December 2021. Intervention participants received three personalized feedback reports targeting several aspects of antibiotic prescribing. Study outcomes (overall prescribing rate, prescribing rate for viral respiratory conditions, prescribing rate for acute sinusitis, and mean duration of therapy) were evaluated using multilevel regression models. We observed a decrease in the mean duration of antibiotic therapy (IRR = 0.94; 95% CI: 0.90, 0.99) in intervention participants during the intervention period. We did not observe a significant decline in overall antibiotic prescribing (OR = 1.01; 95% CI: 0.94, 1.07), prescribing for viral respiratory conditions (OR = 0.87; 95% CI: 0.73, 1.03), or prescribing for acute sinusitis (OR = 0.85; 95% CI: 0.67, 1.07). In this antimicrobial stewardship intervention among primary care physicians, we observed shorter durations of therapy per antibiotic prescription during the intervention period. The COVID-19 pandemic may have hampered recruitment; a dramatic reduction in antibiotic prescribing rates in the months before our intervention may have made physicians less amenable to further reductions in prescribing, limiting the generalizability of the estimates obtained. IMPORTANCE Antibiotic overprescribing contributes to antibiotic resistance, a major threat to our ability to treat infections. We developed the OPEN Stewardship (Online Platform for Expanding aNtibiotic Stewardship) platform to provide automated feedback on antibiotic prescribing in primary care, where most antibiotics for human use are prescribed but where the resources to improve antibiotic prescribing are limited. We evaluated the platform among a cohort of primary care physicians from Ontario, Canada and Southern Israel from October 2020 to December 2021. The results showed that physicians who received personalized feedback reports prescribed shorter courses of antibiotics compared to controls, although they did not write fewer antibiotic prescriptions. While the COVID-19 pandemic presented logistical and analytical challenges, our study suggests that our intervention meaningfully improved an important aspect of antibiotic prescribing. The OPEN Stewardship platform stands as an automated, scalable intervention for improving antibiotic prescribing in primary care, where needs are diverse and technical capacity is limited.

Funder

Joint Programming Initiative on Antimicrobial Resistance

Publisher

American Society for Microbiology

Reference44 articles.

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5. Antibiotic development — economic, regulatory and societal challenges

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