Health Services Research Unit, University of Aberdeen, Aberdeen, Scotland, UK.
NIHR Health Protection Research Unit in Healthcare Associated Infections and Antimicrobial Resistance, Faculty of Medicine, Imperial College London, London, UK.
J Antimicrob Chemother. 2020 May 1;75(5):1338-1346. doi: 10.1093/jac/dkaa001.
Reducing unnecessary antibiotic exposure is a key strategy in reducing the development and selection of antibiotic-resistant bacteria. Hospital antimicrobial stewardship (AMS) interventions are inherently complex, often requiring multiple healthcare professionals to change multiple behaviours at multiple timepoints along the care pathway. Inaction can arise when roles and responsibilities are unclear. A behavioural perspective can offer insights to maximize the chances of successful implementation.
To apply a behavioural framework [the Target Action Context Timing Actors (TACTA) framework] to existing evidence about hospital AMS interventions to specify which key behavioural aspects of interventions are detailed.
Randomized controlled trials (RCTs) and interrupted time series (ITS) studies with a focus on reducing unnecessary exposure to antibiotics were identified from the most recent Cochrane review of interventions to improve hospital AMS. The TACTA framework was applied to published intervention reports to assess the extent to which key details were reported about what behaviour should be performed, who is responsible for doing it and when, where, how often and with whom it should be performed.
The included studies (n = 45; 31 RCTs and 14 ITS studies with 49 outcome measures) reported what should be done, where and to whom. However, key details were missing about who should act (45%) and when (22%). Specification of who should act was missing in 79% of 15 interventions to reduce duration of treatment in continuing-care wards.
The lack of precise specification within AMS interventions limits the generalizability and reproducibility of evidence, hampering efforts to implement AMS interventions in practice.
减少不必要的抗生素暴露是减少抗生素耐药菌产生和选择的关键策略。医院抗菌药物管理(AMS)干预措施本质上很复杂,通常需要多个医疗保健专业人员在护理路径的多个时间点改变多个行为。当角色和职责不明确时,就可能会出现不作为的情况。行为视角可以提供洞察力,以最大程度地提高成功实施的机会。
将行为框架(目标行动情境时间参与者(TACTA)框架)应用于现有的关于医院 AMS 干预措施的证据,以确定干预措施中哪些关键行为方面被详细说明。
从最近的 Cochrane 关于改善医院 AMS 的干预措施的综述中确定了以减少不必要的抗生素暴露为重点的随机对照试验(RCT)和中断时间序列(ITS)研究。将 TACTA 框架应用于已发表的干预报告,以评估报告中关于应执行哪些行为、谁负责执行以及何时、何地、频率和与谁执行的关键细节的程度。
纳入的研究(n=45;31 项 RCT 和 14 项 ITS 研究,共 49 项结局指标)报告了应该做什么、在哪里和给谁。然而,关于谁应该采取行动(45%)和何时(22%)的关键细节缺失。在 15 项旨在减少持续护理病房治疗持续时间的干预措施中,有 79%的干预措施没有明确规定应该由谁采取行动。
AMS 干预措施中缺乏精确的规范限制了证据的推广和复制性,阻碍了在实践中实施 AMS 干预措施的努力。