Broom Alex, Plage Stefanie, Broom Jennifer, Kirby Emma, Adams Jon
School of Social Sciences, The University of New South Wales, Sydney, NSW, 2052, Australia.
Department of Medicine, Sunshine Coast Hospital and Health Service, Nambour, QLD, 4560, Australia.
BMC Health Serv Res. 2016 Feb 6;16:43. doi: 10.1186/s12913-016-1290-0.
Antibiotic treatment options for common infections are diminishing due to the proliferation of antimicrobial resistance (AMR). The impact of Antimicrobial Stewardship (AMS) programs seeking to preserve viable antibiotic drugs by governing their use in hospitals has hitherto been limited. Pharmacists have been delegated a critical role in antibiotic governance in AMS teams within hospitals but the experience of pharmacists in influencing antibiotic use has received limited attention. In this study we explore the experiences of pharmacists in antibiotic decision-making in two Australian hospitals.
We conducted 19 semi-structured interviews to explore hospital-based pharmacists' perceptions and experiences of antibiotic use and governance. The analysis was conducted with NVivo10 software, utilising the framework approach.
Three major themes emerged in the pharmacist interviews including (1) the responsibilities of pharmacy in optimising antibiotic use and the interprofessional challenges therein; (2) the importance of antibiotic streamlining and the constraints placed on pharmacists in achieving this; and (3) the potential, but often under-utilised expertise, pharmacists bring to antibiotic optimisation.
Pharmacists have a critical role in AMS teams but their capacity to enact change is limited by entrenched interprofessional dynamics. Identifying how hospital pharmacy's antibiotic gatekeeping is embedded in the interprofessional nature of clinical decision-making and limited by organisational environment has important implications for the implementation of hospital policies seeking to streamline antibiotic use. Resource constraints (i.e. time limitation and task prioritisation) in particular limit the capacity of pharmacists to overcome the interprofessional barriers through development of stronger collaborative relationships. The results of this study suggest that to enact change in antibiotic use in hospitals, pharmacists must be supported in their negotiations with doctors, have increased presence on hospital wards, and must be given opportunities to pass on specialist knowledge within multidisciplinary clinical teams.
由于抗菌药物耐药性(AMR)的扩散,常见感染的抗生素治疗选择正在减少。旨在通过管理医院抗生素使用来保留可用抗生素药物的抗菌药物管理(AMS)计划的影响迄今有限。药剂师在医院AMS团队的抗生素管理中被赋予了关键角色,但药剂师在影响抗生素使用方面的经验受到的关注有限。在本研究中,我们探讨了澳大利亚两家医院药剂师在抗生素决策方面的经验。
我们进行了19次半结构化访谈,以探讨医院药剂师对抗生素使用和管理的看法和经验。使用NVivo10软件,采用框架方法进行分析。
药剂师访谈中出现了三个主要主题,包括(1)药房在优化抗生素使用方面的责任以及其中的跨专业挑战;(2)抗生素简化的重要性以及药剂师在实现这一目标时所面临的限制;(3)药剂师为抗生素优化带来的潜力,但往往未得到充分利用的专业知识。
药剂师在AMS团队中发挥着关键作用,但他们实施变革的能力受到根深蒂固的跨专业动态的限制。确定医院药房的抗生素把关如何融入临床决策的跨专业性质并受到组织环境的限制,对于旨在简化抗生素使用的医院政策的实施具有重要意义。资源限制(即时间限制和任务优先级)尤其限制了药剂师通过建立更强的合作关系来克服跨专业障碍的能力。本研究结果表明,要在医院中改变抗生素使用情况,必须支持药剂师与医生的谈判,增加他们在医院病房的存在感,并给予他们在多学科临床团队中传递专业知识的机会。