Stepped wedge behavioral intervention clinical trial looking at the impact of an antibiotic stewardship intervention on provider prescribing behavior for acute respiratory infections (ARIs), where the intervention is administered at the emergency department or urgent care center site level, using a cluster randomization process. Thus, every site and every provider are eligible to be exposed to the stewardship intervention, the cluster randomized stepped wedge process simply randomizes when they will be exposed. The overall study hypothesis is that providers will prescribe fewer unnecessary antibiotics to patients with ARIs after the intervention.
Hypothesis: The primary hypothesis is that acute care ambulatory settings randomized to receive behavioral economic stewardship interventions will have decreased antibiotic prescribing rates for non-antibiotic appropriate ARIs, compared to contemporaneous antibiotic prescribing rates for non-antibiotic appropriate ARIs among control practices. This hypothesis will be evaluated in a linear mixed effects model will be used to estimate and test the group effect using group and time as fixed effects and practice site and provider as random effects. The interaction between time and group will be included to estimate and test the different group effect over time. Design: The investigators will conduct a stepped wedge cluster randomized trial of acute care ambulatory visits to emergency departments and urgent care centers in a predominantly non-academic public hospital system. Clustering (by site) helps prevent treatment contamination between individual clinicians within the same site. The stepped wedge design will allow studying the effects of a complex intervention rolled out through a system over time, as often happens in the real-world, where State and Federal public health as well as site-based organization quality improvement interventions may be occurring at different times. Treatment Assignment Procedures: For the 12-month intervention period, in a stepped-wedge fashion, sites will be exposed to a site-adapted multifaceted stewardship intervention consistent with Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) core elements for outpatient antimicrobial stewardship: commitment, action, monitoring, reporting and education, and also included a behavioral component that used individualized audit and feedback, peer comparison, and public commitment, in addition to standard patient and clinician education on antibiotic prescribing for antibiotic nonresponsive ARIs.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
NA
Purpose
HEALTH_SERVICES_RESEARCH
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
134
For the 12-month intervention period, in a stepped-wedge fashion, sites will be exposed to a site-adapted multifaceted stewardship intervention consistent with CDC core elements for outpatient antimicrobial stewardship: commitment, action, monitoring, reporting and education, and also included a behavioral component that used individualized audit and feedback, peer comparison, and public commitment, in addition to standard patient and clinician education on antibiotic prescribing for antibiotic nonresponsive ARIs.
Department of Health Services
Los Angeles, California, United States
Antibiotic prescribing
The primary outcome measure is the rate of antibiotic prescribing for non-antibiotic-appropriate acute respiratory infections or in other words, acute respiratory infections that are presumed to be viral in nature. The International Classification of Diseases (ICD)-10 codes for primary outcomes are defined in detail in the clinical trials protocol document. These outcomes are computable clinical quality measures from the electronic health record. These are widely used in medicine to evaluate quality improvement and reliability and validity are generally supported. Visits are excluded from the primary analysis when: 1) patients have certain medical co-morbidities that make ARI guidelines less likely to apply, 2) patients had concomitant visit diagnoses indicating a non-ARI possible bacterial infection, or 3) patients had concomitant visit diagnoses indicating potentially antibiotic appropriate ARI diagnoses or other ARI diagnoses suggestive of a bacterial infection.
Time frame: 12 months
Diagnostic drift
Throughout the course of the study, the investigators will also be monitoring "diagnostic drift" that may result in provider shifting diagnosis to avoid guideline conflicts that might trigger poor performance reports. An auditing program will measure diagnostic deviation from each clinician's historical rates of diagnosing acute respiratory infections.
Time frame: 12 months
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