Promoting antibiotic stewardship is important to combatting the spread of antibiotic-resistant bacteria, a public health threat. However, the implementation of antibiotic stewardship practices can be challenging because it involves changing providers’ knowledge, attitudes, and behaviors around antibiotic decision making. Reference Livorsi, Drainoni and Schacht Reisinger1 Few studies have assessed the range of factors that influence antibiotic decision making in acute-care settings. Understanding factors that influence these decisions can be an important prerequisite to identifying knowledge gaps and designing more effective antibiotic stewardship strategies. In this study, we identified factors that influence decision making about antibiotics across 15 hospitals in the Veterans’ Health Administration (VHA).
Methods
During 2018–2019, the study team conducted semistructured interviews with 49 healthcare workers at 15 geographically dispersed VHA hospitals. Data on antibiotic use at these 15 hospitals have been published previously. Reference Suda, Gosia and Charlesnika2 These sites made up the Veterans’ Affairs–Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Practice–Based Research Network (VA-CDC PBRN). Each site had a dedicated research coordinator who was trained by the study team to conduct qualitative interviews. Reference Livorsi, Suda and Cunningham Goedken3
Interview participants included the antibiotic stewardship program physician and pharmacist champion at each of the 15 sites (n = 30), as well as other key stakeholders (n = 19) at 5 sites, including pharmacy administrators (n = 5), hospitalists (n = 5), ICU physicians (n = 5), and emergency department providers (n = 4). The interviews were designed to elicit perspectives on barriers and facilitators to the adoption of antibiotic management policies for fluoroquinolones and extended-spectrum cephalosporins, as previously described. Reference Livorsi, Suda and Cunningham Goedken3 Interviews also explored decisional factors that influence the use of any antibiotics for 4 common infections: pneumonia, urinary tract infections, intra-abdominal infections, and skin and soft-tissue infections. All interview guides can be found in the Supplementary Material.
Each interview was audio-recorded on encrypted recorders, when possible, and was then transcribed. Transcripts from 47 interviews and detailed notes from 2 interviews were uploaded into MAXQDA, a qualitative data management software program (VERBI Software, Berlin, Germany). An interdisciplinary team of physicians with antibiotic stewardship expertise and qualitative analysts analyzed the transcripts using thematic analysis, subcoding, and categorization. Reference Pope and Mays4 First, transcripts were reviewed by the analysis team, and a code book was developed from the interview guide and from emergent content. The transcripts were then coded by consensus. Reference Ryan and Bernard5 Second, the analysis team subcoded intersecting segments for “decisional factors” surrounding antibiotic prescribing for “pneumonia.” The final phase involved 2 team members (E.E. and D.L.) expanding the subcoding process to apply the decisional factor subcodes to interview segments addressing the other infection types. To be considered relevant for analysis, a decisional factor must have been mentioned by at least 2 participants. After all relevant factors were reviewed, team members discussed broader categories for potential grouping. Ultimately, each factor was grouped into 1 of 5 categories based on group consensus.
The Veterans’ Affairs Central Institutional Review Board granted a waiver for written informed consent for participants in the semistructured interviews. The study team reviewed but did not document informed consent information with all participants.
Results
Table 1 provides an overview of the 15 participating hospitals. A common theme across the interviews was the complexity of antibiotic prescribing decisions. Some participants even stated that it was impossible to respond to interview questions about antibiotic prescribing for certain infections without additional information on the clinical scenario. One stewardship pharmacist champion highlighted the individuality of each patient’s situation and the difficulty of speaking in generalities about antibiotic prescribing: “The value of us [the stewardship team] reviewing all these antibiotics is that every single patient is slightly different and there’s lots of gray area and nuance.” A stewardship physician champion similarly stated, “The problem is that antibiotics are not black and white.” According to a different stewardship pharmacist, “That’s the theme of ID. Everything depends.”
a The Veterans’ Health Administration classifies its medical facilities at the following levels of complexity: 1a, 1b, 1c, 2, or 3. A hospital’s complexity level is based on its patient population, clinical services, education and research. The most complex hospitals are level 1a, and the least complex are level 3.
In total, 31 unique decisional factors were identified (Table 2) and were sorted into 1 of 5 categories: (1) type of infection, (2) patient-specific factors, (3) contextual factors, (4) provider-specific factors, and (5) drug-specific factors. Type of infection included factors like diagnostic test results, including microbiologic cultures, and the complexity of the infection. Patient-specific factors included age, comorbidities, and the patient’s risk of having an antibiotic-resistant infection. Contextual factors included local rates of antibiotic-resistant bacteria, social norms around antibiotic use, and antibiotic restrictions. Provider-specific factors included a provider’s knowledge, clinical instincts, and relative concern (or lack thereof) for antibiotic-related adverse outcomes. Drug-specific factors included antibiotic spectrum of activity, ease of dosing, and oral bioavailability. Participants reported considering many of these factors simultaneously when making prescribing decisions.
Some decisional factors that participants described were not well defined, such as “complicated infection,” “healthcare exposure,” or “septic.” For these terms, specific definitions were often not provided. As an example, the term “healthcare exposure” was frequently used to justify broader antibiotic therapy. A minority of participants expressed concern about this term, particularly in relation to pneumonia. According to one physician champion, “Studies have shown that the criteria or the scores to say this is ‘healthcare-associated pneumonia’ are no better than flipping a coin to identify somebody who has one of those resistant pathogens.” Instead of using the term “healthcare exposure,” a stewardship pharmacist champion explained that “we would try to do more risk factor-based therapy,” which would involve assessing specific risk factors for Pseudomonas aeruginosa or methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus.
Discussion
Our investigation of decisional factors revealed that providers consider >30 factors when making antibiotic prescribing decisions in acute-care settings. The influence of specific factors may differ across providers, but there was strong consensus that these prescribing decisions are complex.
Although many of the identified factors may seem obvious to clinicians who prescribe antibiotics, few studies have tried to broadly identify the multiple facets of these decisions, as we have done. Some of the decisional factors we identified have also been described in prior research about antibiotic decision making in studies across different types of infections, different countries, and different healthcare settings. Reference Kim, Szymczak and Schnellinger6–Reference Cressman, MacFadden, Verma, Razak and Daneman10
Our findings may help identify potential targets for educating prescribers about antibiotics. For example, some participants stated a preference for using oral antibiotics with high bioavailability or for using intravenous agents over oral agents, and this finding highlights an opportunity for antibiotic stewardship teams to better define when these pharmacologic properties are most clinically relevant. Although healthcare exposure was often cited as a reason to prescribe more broad-spectrum antibiotics, the nuances of which types of exposure truly increase the risk of antibiotic resistance may not be as well understood.
Our study had several limitations. Although we enrolled a geographically diverse sample of providers, our findings may not be generalizable to non-VHA settings. Our interview guides were not created explicitly to parse out specific decisional factors. However, we would expect that if a decisional factor was relevant, it would have been raised by at least some of the 49 participants. We were able to identify decisional factors, but we were unable to assess the perceived importance of each of these factors in general and relative to different types of infections. To evaluate how participants prioritize these factors, our findings could be leveraged in future surveys and/or in-depth semistructured interviews that are specifically designed for this purpose.
In summary, we have elucidated many factors that providers consider when making antibiotic prescribing decisions for common infections in acute-care settings. This information should be considered when developing and implementing antibiotic stewardship strategies, particularly strategies focused on education.
Supplementary material
To view supplementary material for this article, please visit https://doi.org/10.1017/ash.2022.230
Acknowledgments
The opinions expressed are those of the authors and do not reflect those of the Department of Veterans’ Affairs or the US government.
Financial support
This work was supported by the VA-CDC Practice-Based Research Network, which was funded collaboratively by the VA Health Services Research and Development (HSR&D) service and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. It was also supported by a Career Development Award (grant no. CDA 16-204, DJL) and the Collaborative Research to Enhance and Advance Transformation and Excellence program (grant no. CRE 12-289, HSR) from the VA HSR&D.
Conflicts of interest
All authors report no conflicts of interest.