Department of Medicine, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD.
Armstrong Institute for Patient Safety and Quality, Baltimore, MD.
Fam Pract. 2020 Mar 25;37(2):276-282. doi: 10.1093/fampra/cmz066.
Perceived patient demand for antibiotics drives unnecessary antibiotic prescribing in outpatient settings, but little is known about how clinicians experience this demand or how this perceived demand shapes their decision-making.
To identify how clinicians perceive patient demand for antibiotics and the way these perceptions stimulate unnecessary prescribing.
Qualitative study using semi-structured interviews with clinicians in outpatient settings who prescribe antibiotics. Interviews were analyzed using conventional and directed content analysis.
Interviews were conducted with 25 clinicians from nine practices across three states. Patient demand was the most common reason respondents provided for why they prescribed non-indicated antibiotics. Three related factors motivated clinically unnecessary antibiotic use in the face of perceived patient demand: (i) clinicians want their patients to regard clinical visits as valuable and believe that an antibiotic prescription demonstrates value; (ii) clinicians want to avoid negative repercussions of denying antibiotics, including reduced income, damage to their reputation, emotional exhaustion, and degraded relationships with patients; (iii) clinicians believed that certain patients are impossible to satisfy without an antibiotic prescription and felt that efforts to refuse antibiotics to such patients wastes time and invites the aforementioned negative repercussions. Clinicians in urgent care settings were especially likely to describe being motivated by these factors.
Interventions to improve antibiotic use in the outpatient setting must address clinicians' concerns about providing value for their patients, fear of negative repercussions from denying antibiotics, and the approach to inconvincible patients.
患者对抗生素的需求被认为是导致门诊环境中非必要抗生素处方的原因,但对于临床医生如何体验这种需求,以及这些感知需求如何影响他们的决策,我们知之甚少。
确定临床医生如何感知患者对抗生素的需求,以及这些感知如何刺激不必要的处方。
采用半结构式访谈对九个州的九个诊所的开抗生素处方的临床医生进行定性研究。采用常规和定向内容分析对访谈进行分析。
共对 25 名来自三个州的九个诊所的临床医生进行了访谈。患者需求是受访者提供的非指示性抗生素处方的最常见原因。面对感知到的患者需求,有三个相关因素促使临床医生不合理地使用抗生素:(i)临床医生希望患者认为就诊有价值,并且认为开抗生素处方可以体现价值;(ii)临床医生希望避免拒绝抗生素的负面后果,包括收入减少、声誉受损、情绪疲惫和与患者关系恶化;(iii)临床医生认为某些患者如果不开抗生素处方就无法满足,并且觉得拒绝给这些患者开抗生素处方既浪费时间,又会招致上述负面后果。急诊诊所的临床医生尤其可能会受到这些因素的驱动。
要改善门诊环境中的抗生素使用,干预措施必须解决临床医生对为患者提供价值、拒绝抗生素的负面后果、以及对不可阻挡的患者的处理方式的担忧。