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Development of an intervention to support the implementation of evidence-based strategies for optimising antibiotic prescribing in general practice

Development of an intervention to support the implementation of evidence-based strategies for optimising antibiotic prescribing in general practice
Development of an intervention to support the implementation of evidence-based strategies for optimising antibiotic prescribing in general practice
Background: trials show that antimicrobial stewardship (AMS) strategies, including communication skills training, point-of-care C-reactive protein testing (POC-CRPT) and delayed prescriptions, help optimise antibiotic prescribing and use in primary care. However, the use of these strategies in general practice is limited and inconsistent. We aimed to develop an intervention to enhance uptake and implementation of these strategies in primary care.

Methods: we drew on the Person-Based Approach to develop an implementation intervention in two stages. (1) Planning and design: We defined the problem in behavioural terms drawing on existing literature and conducting primary qualitative research (nine focus groups) in high-prescribing general practices. We identified ‘guiding principles’ with intervention objectives and key features and developed logic models representing intended mechanisms of action. (2) Developing the intervention: We created prototype intervention materials and discussed and refined these with input from 13 health professionals and 14 citizens in two sets of design workshops. We further refined the intervention materials following think-aloud interviews with 22 health professionals.
Results: focus groups highlighted uncertainties about how strategies could be used. Health professionals in the workshops suggested having practice champions, brief summaries of each AMS strategy and evidence supporting the AMS strategies, and they and citizens gave examples of helpful communication strategies/phrases. Think-aloud interviews helped clarify and shorten the text and user journey of the intervention materials. The intervention comprised components to support practice-level implementation: antibiotic champions, practice meetings with slides provided, and an ‘implementation support’ website section, and components to support individual-level uptake: website sections on each AMS strategy (with evidence, instructions, links to electronic resources) and material resources (patient leaflets, POC-CRPT equipment, clinician handouts).

Conclusions: we used a systematic, user-focussed process of developing a behavioural intervention, illustrating how it can be used in an implementation context. This resulted in a multicomponent intervention to facilitate practice-wide implementation of evidence-based strategies which now requires implementing and evaluating. Focusing on supporting the uptake and implementation of evidence-based strategies to optimise antibiotic use in general practice is critical to further support appropriate antibiotic use and mitigate antimicrobial resistance.
Borek, Aleksandra
bd62f409-7016-4978-87ed-e35e6299967c
Campbell, Anne
d85ff9e9-d537-4c4f-910f-9ec35d6f462e
Dent, Elle
11deda7d-f1ca-4070-8f17-ff4e8e952e56
Moore, Michael
1be81dad-7120-45f0-bbed-f3b0cc0cfe99
Butler, Christopher C.
2782a915-eb8d-48bb-ae70-118114697f57
Holmes, Alison
c5420a59-f403-44a8-8611-aaf430fa9d4c
Walker, A. Sarah
e07841ba-91e9-4b85-971b-b95c299afa3a
Mcleod, Monsey
89050fbd-82e2-45b9-aa7e-be5d9143041a
Tonkin-Crine, Sarah
453132bf-d8a2-41c5-999d-cb2fcfb45239
STEP-UP study team
Borek, Aleksandra
bd62f409-7016-4978-87ed-e35e6299967c
Campbell, Anne
d85ff9e9-d537-4c4f-910f-9ec35d6f462e
Dent, Elle
11deda7d-f1ca-4070-8f17-ff4e8e952e56
Moore, Michael
1be81dad-7120-45f0-bbed-f3b0cc0cfe99
Butler, Christopher C.
2782a915-eb8d-48bb-ae70-118114697f57
Holmes, Alison
c5420a59-f403-44a8-8611-aaf430fa9d4c
Walker, A. Sarah
e07841ba-91e9-4b85-971b-b95c299afa3a
Mcleod, Monsey
89050fbd-82e2-45b9-aa7e-be5d9143041a
Tonkin-Crine, Sarah
453132bf-d8a2-41c5-999d-cb2fcfb45239

STEP-UP study team (2021) Development of an intervention to support the implementation of evidence-based strategies for optimising antibiotic prescribing in general practice. Implementation Science Communications, 2021: 2, [104]. (doi:10.1186/s43058-021-00209-7).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background: trials show that antimicrobial stewardship (AMS) strategies, including communication skills training, point-of-care C-reactive protein testing (POC-CRPT) and delayed prescriptions, help optimise antibiotic prescribing and use in primary care. However, the use of these strategies in general practice is limited and inconsistent. We aimed to develop an intervention to enhance uptake and implementation of these strategies in primary care.

Methods: we drew on the Person-Based Approach to develop an implementation intervention in two stages. (1) Planning and design: We defined the problem in behavioural terms drawing on existing literature and conducting primary qualitative research (nine focus groups) in high-prescribing general practices. We identified ‘guiding principles’ with intervention objectives and key features and developed logic models representing intended mechanisms of action. (2) Developing the intervention: We created prototype intervention materials and discussed and refined these with input from 13 health professionals and 14 citizens in two sets of design workshops. We further refined the intervention materials following think-aloud interviews with 22 health professionals.
Results: focus groups highlighted uncertainties about how strategies could be used. Health professionals in the workshops suggested having practice champions, brief summaries of each AMS strategy and evidence supporting the AMS strategies, and they and citizens gave examples of helpful communication strategies/phrases. Think-aloud interviews helped clarify and shorten the text and user journey of the intervention materials. The intervention comprised components to support practice-level implementation: antibiotic champions, practice meetings with slides provided, and an ‘implementation support’ website section, and components to support individual-level uptake: website sections on each AMS strategy (with evidence, instructions, links to electronic resources) and material resources (patient leaflets, POC-CRPT equipment, clinician handouts).

Conclusions: we used a systematic, user-focussed process of developing a behavioural intervention, illustrating how it can be used in an implementation context. This resulted in a multicomponent intervention to facilitate practice-wide implementation of evidence-based strategies which now requires implementing and evaluating. Focusing on supporting the uptake and implementation of evidence-based strategies to optimise antibiotic use in general practice is critical to further support appropriate antibiotic use and mitigate antimicrobial resistance.

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Accepted/In Press date: 30 August 2021
Published date: 15 September 2021

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 469560
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/469560
PURE UUID: b1c35c52-4978-4eb9-a8dd-017472b68ab9
ORCID for Michael Moore: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-5127-4509

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Date deposited: 20 Sep 2022 16:36
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 03:01

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Contributors

Author: Aleksandra Borek
Author: Anne Campbell
Author: Elle Dent
Author: Michael Moore ORCID iD
Author: Christopher C. Butler
Author: Alison Holmes
Author: A. Sarah Walker
Author: Monsey Mcleod
Author: Sarah Tonkin-Crine
Corporate Author: STEP-UP study team

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