3 key findings on provider’s antibiotic prescription feedback preferences

A study, published in Infection Control & Hospital Epidemiology, examined physicians’ preferences with regard to receiving feedback on antimicrobial use and how these may be used to improve antibiotic stewardship programs.

Advertisement

Researchers conducted a 20-question survey, polling 211 providers at Vanderbilt University Medical Center in Nashville, Tenn.

Researchers found:

• 89 percent of respondents preferred their own institutions determining provider use attribution.
• 64 percent wanted to be compared to other providers within their service. Of those physicians, 69 percent wanted feedback provided on a quarterly basis and 73 percent wanted the feedback provided via email.
• 51 percent of providers anticipated changing practice based on feedback.

“Antimicrobial use feedback is an important component of antibiotic stewardship initiatives that can improve the use of these drugs,” said Tara Lines, PharmD, an infectious disease pharmacy resident at VUMC and lead author of the study. “Understanding and anticipating the best way to communicate with providers can help drive change by ensuring providers are reached effectively.”

More articles on healthcare quality:
This flu season was the deadliest for children in nearly a decade
Rhode Island Hospital to invest $1M in training after 4 patient errors in 4 weeks
Cincinnati hospital nurses warn new CNO of staffing crisis, patient safety concerns

Advertisement

Next Up in Clinical Leadership & Infection Control

Advertisement

Comments are closed.