AI Article Synopsis

  • - The study aimed to understand the factors influencing antibiotic prescribing decisions for COVID-19 pneumonia patients during the initial pandemic phase, using interviews with clinicians across NHS trusts in England and Wales.
  • - Clinicians' antibiotic prescriptions were initially guided by fears of secondary bacterial infections, but as their experience with COVID-19 grew, they became more adept at identifying when antibiotics were necessary versus when they weren't.
  • - A model was created to illustrate the decision-making process, emphasizing the roles of clinician confidence, experience, senior support, and organizational context in improving antibiotic stewardship during the pandemic.

Article Abstract

Objective: To explore and model factors affecting antibiotic prescribing decision-making early in the pandemic.

Design: Semistructured qualitative interview study.

Setting: National Health Service (NHS) trusts/health boards in England and Wales.

Participants: Clinicians from NHS trusts/health boards in England and Wales.

Method: Individual semistructured interviews were conducted with clinicians in six NHS trusts/health boards in England and Wales as part of the Procalcitonin Evaluation of Antibiotic use in COVID-19 Hospitalised patients study, a wider study that included statistical analysis of procalcitonin (PCT) use in hospitals during the first wave of the pandemic. Thematic analysis was used to identify key factors influencing antibiotic prescribing decisions for patients with COVID-19 pneumonia during the first wave of the pandemic (March to May 2020), including how much influence PCT test results had on these decisions.

Results: During the first wave of the pandemic, recommendations to prescribe antibiotics for patients with COVID-19 pneumonia were based on concerns about secondary bacterial infections. However, as clinicians gained more experience with COVID-19, they reported increasing confidence in their ability to distinguish between symptoms and signs caused by SARS-CoV-2 viral infection alone, and secondary bacterial infections. Antibiotic prescribing decisions were influenced by factors such as clinician experience, confidence, senior support, situational factors and organisational influences. A decision-making model was developed.

Conclusion: This study provides insight into the decision-making process around antibiotic prescribing for patients with COVID-19 pneumonia during the first wave of the pandemic. The importance of clinician experience and of senior review of decisions as factors in optimising antibiotic stewardship is highlighted. In addition, situational and organisational factors were identified that could be optimised. The model presented in the study can be used as a tool to aid understanding of the complexity of the decision-making process around antibiotic prescribing and planning antimicrobial stewardship support in the context of a pandemic.

Trial Registration Number: ISRCTN66682918.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2023-077117DOI Listing
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10748988PMC

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