The purpose of this study is to test a strategy to improve the quality of antibiotic use in lower respiratory tract infections (LRTIs) at hospitals. Therefore, a multifaceted intervention strategy is compared to a control strategy and the effectiveness and feasibility of the intervention is assessed.
Improving processes of care in patients with hospital LRTI has been related to better patient outcome. Inappropriate use of antibiotics has contributed to the emergence and spread of drug-resistant micro organisms and increased treatment costs. International guidelines provide recommendations for the initial evaluation and management of LRTI, including advice on judicious antibiotic therapy. Nonetheless, studies have demonstrated a wide variability in adherence to these guidelines. To implement key recommendations in clinical practice, various strategies have been used, with mixed results. Perhaps the most important aspect of choosing a potentially effective intervention is that the choice of intervention should be based upon assessment of potential barriers in the target group. Many intervention studies are flawed by failing to control for secular trends. The investigators performed a cluster randomised controlled trial, to study the effect of a multifaceted intervention strategy on the quality of antibiotic use for LRTI. Their intervention was tailored to the areas most in need for improvement and took perceived barriers in the target group into consideration at the individual hospital level.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
ECT
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
2,000
Gelre Ziekenhuizen
Apeldoorn, Netherlands
Deventer Ziekenhuis
Deventer, Netherlands
Ziekenhuis Gelderse Vallei
Ede, Netherlands
Bernhoven Ziekenhuis
Oss, Netherlands
adherence to key quality indicators for antibiotic use in lower respiratory tract infections (indicators were developed from current [inter]national guideline recommendations and a systematic review of the literature)
cost
process evaluation: how well was the intervention performed
length of hospital stay
in-hospital mortality
Intensive Care Unit (ICU)-transfer
30 day re-admission rate
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Bernhoven Ziekenhuis
Veghel, Netherlands
Maxima Medisch Centrum
Veldhoven, Netherlands
Vie Curi Medisch Centrum
Venlo, Netherlands