Public Health Ontario, Toronto, ON, Canada.
Women's College Hospital Institute for Health System Solutions and Virtual Care, Women's College Hospital, Toronto, ON, Canada.
BMC Prim Care. 2022 Jul 28;23(1):188. doi: 10.1186/s12875-022-01806-8.
Unnecessary antibiotic use is associated with adverse side effects and rising rates of resistance at the individual and population level. This study used a theory-informed approach to identify potentially modifiable determinants of antibiotic prescribing for patients presenting to primary care with upper respiratory tract infection symptoms.
Qualitative interviews were conducted with primary care physicians in Ontario, Canada who were identified as medium- or high-volume antibiotic prescribers (high volume defined as top 20 percentile versus "medium" defined as 40 to 60 percentile). The interview guide and analysis were informed by the Theoretical Domains Framework. Each interview was coded by two research team members. Sampling and analysis continued until thematic saturation was achieved.
Twenty family physicians were interviewed. Physicians felt that many decisions about prescribing for upper respiratory tract infection symptoms were straightforward (i.e., black and white). However, intention to avoid prescribing in cases where an antibiotic was not indicated clinically did not always align with the provider action or expectation of the patient. Clinical decisions were influenced by the Theoretical Domain Framework domains that were both internal to the physician (Knowledge, Skills, Social/Professional Role, and Belief about Capabilities) and external to the physician (Social Influence, Belief about Consequences, Reinforcement, Emotions, and Behavioural Regulation). The Environmental Context and Resources played a key role. Physicians reported significant differences in their approach to antibiotic prescribing within episodic (walk-in) or continuity of care settings, as the presence (or not) of longitudinal physician-patient relationships seemed to moderate the role of these factors on the decision-making process in cases of uncertainty.
Antibiotic prescribing in primary care is a complex decision-making process in which context may outweigh biology during encounters featuring clinical uncertainty. Differential skill in handling uncertainty and tactics used to operationalize guideline recommendations in the real world seems to contribute to observed variation in prescribing patterns, as much or more than differences in knowledge of best practices.
在个体和人群层面,不必要的抗生素使用与不良反应和耐药率上升有关。本研究采用理论指导的方法,确定了导致初级保健患者出现上呼吸道感染症状时开具抗生素处方的潜在可改变因素。
对加拿大安大略省的初级保健医生进行了定性访谈,这些医生被确定为中或高剂量抗生素开方者(高剂量定义为前 20%,“中”定义为 40%至 60%)。访谈指南和分析以理论领域框架为依据。每个访谈由两名研究团队成员进行编码。抽样和分析持续进行,直到达到主题饱和。
共对 20 名家庭医生进行了访谈。医生们认为,许多关于上呼吸道感染症状处方的决定都是直截了当的(即,非黑即白)。然而,避免在临床上不需要开抗生素的情况下开处方的意图并不总是与提供者的行动或患者的期望一致。临床决策受到理论领域框架中医生内部(知识、技能、社会/职业角色和能力信念)和医生外部(社会影响、后果信念、强化、情绪和行为调节)的因素的影响。环境背景和资源起着关键作用。医生报告说,在门诊或连续护理环境中,他们对抗生素处方的处理方法存在显著差异,因为纵向医患关系的存在(或不存在)似乎缓和了这些因素在不确定情况下对决策过程的作用。
初级保健中的抗生素处方是一个复杂的决策过程,在出现临床不确定性的情况下,背景可能比生物学更重要。在处理不确定性的技能差异以及在现实世界中实施指南建议的策略似乎与观察到的处方模式差异一样,或者比最佳实践知识差异更能促成处方模式的差异。