Veterans Affairs Connecticut Healthcare System, West Haven, Connecticut, USA.
Department of Internal Medicine, Yale School of Medicine, New Haven, Connecticut, USA.
J Am Geriatr Soc. 2024 May;72(5):1468-1475. doi: 10.1111/jgs.18778. Epub 2024 Jan 19.
Evaluating infection in home-based primary care is challenging, and these challenges may impact antibiotic prescribing. A refined understanding of antibiotic decision-making in this setting can inform strategies to promote antibiotic stewardship. This study investigated antibiotic decision-making by exploring the perspectives of clinicians in home-based primary care.
Clinicians from the Department of Veterans Affairs Home-Based Primary Care Program were recruited. Semi-structured interviews were conducted from June 2022 through September 2022 using a discussion guide. Transcripts were analyzed using grounded theory. The constant comparative method was used to develop a coding structure and to identify themes.
Theoretical saturation was reached after 22 clinicians (physicians, n = 7; physician assistants, n = 2, advanced practice registered nurses, n = 13) from 19 programs were interviewed. Mean age was 48.5 ± 9.3 years, 91% were female, and 59% had ≥6 years of experience in home-based primary care. Participants reported uncertainty about the diagnosis of infection due to the characteristics of homebound patients (atypical presentations of disease, presence of multiple chronic conditions, presence of cognitive impairment) and the challenges of delivering medical care in the home (limited access to diagnostic testing, suboptimal quality of microbiological specimens, barriers to establishing remote access to the electronic health record). When faced with diagnostic uncertainty about infection, participants described many factors that influenced the decision to prescribe antibiotics, including those that promoted prescribing (desire to avoid hospitalization, pressure from caregivers, unreliable plans for follow-up) and those that inhibited prescribing (perceptions of antibiotic-associated harms, willingness to trial non-pharmacological interventions first, presence of caregivers who were trusted by clinicians to monitor symptoms).
Clinicians face the difficult task of balancing diagnostic uncertainty with many competing considerations during the treatment of infection in home-based primary care. Recognizing these issues provides insight into strategies to promote antibiotic stewardship in home care settings.
评估家庭初级保健中的感染具有挑战性,这些挑战可能会影响抗生素的使用。深入了解家庭初级保健环境中的抗生素决策有助于制定促进抗生素管理的策略。本研究通过探索家庭初级保健计划中的临床医生的观点来研究抗生素决策。
从 2022 年 6 月至 2022 年 9 月,通过使用讨论指南,从退伍军人事务部家庭初级保健计划中招募临床医生。使用半结构化访谈进行,从 19 个项目中采访了 22 名临床医生(医生,n = 7;医生助理,n = 2,高级执业注册护士,n = 13)。分析使用扎根理论。使用恒定比较法建立编码结构并确定主题。
在采访了 19 个项目中的 22 名临床医生(医生,n = 7;医生助理,n = 2,高级执业注册护士,n = 13)后,达到了理论饱和度。平均年龄为 48.5 ± 9.3 岁,91%为女性,59%有≥6 年的家庭初级保健经验。参与者报告说,由于居家患者的特征(疾病表现不典型、存在多种慢性疾病、存在认知障碍)和在家庭中提供医疗保健的挑战(获得诊断测试的机会有限、微生物样本质量不理想、远程访问电子健康记录的障碍),他们对感染的诊断不确定。当面对感染的诊断不确定时,参与者描述了许多影响开抗生素处方的因素,包括促进开处方的因素(避免住院的愿望、照顾者的压力、随访计划不可靠)和抑制开处方的因素(对抗生素相关危害的看法、愿意首先尝试非药物干预、存在临床医生信任的可以监测症状的照顾者)。
临床医生在家庭初级保健中治疗感染时,面临着平衡诊断不确定性和许多相互竞争的考虑因素的艰巨任务。认识到这些问题为在家庭护理环境中促进抗生素管理提供了深入了解。