influence of telephone communication on antibiotic prescribing in nursing homes

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The 2011 Wisconsin Health Improvement and Research Partnership Forum Fluno Center, Madison, WI September, 15 2011. Influence of Telephone Communication on Antibiotic Prescribing in Nursing Homes. Christopher J. Crnich, MD MS 1, 2. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Influence of Telephone Communication on

Antibiotic Prescribing in Nursing Homes

The 2011 Wisconsin Health Improvement and Research Partnership Forum

Fluno Center, Madison, WI September, 15 2011

Christopher J. Crnich, MD MS1, 2

1 University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health, Madison, WI2 William S. Middleton Veterans Affairs Hospital, Madison, WI

“We can look forward with confidence to a considerable degree of freedom from infectious diseases at a time not too far in the future. Indeed … it seems reasonable to anticipate that within some measurable time… all the major infections will have disappeared.”

T. Aidan Cockburn, 1963

“Antibiotic therapy, if indiscriminately used, may turn out to be a medicinal flood that temporarily cleans and heals, but ultimately destroys life itself.”

Felix Marti-Ibanez, 1955

“At the beginning of the 21st century, antimicrobial resistance is common, has developed against every class of antimicrobial drug, and appears to be spreading into new clinical niches.”

Stephan Harbarth & Matthew Samore, 2005

Global Resistance

Ryback et al. Pharmacotherapy 2005; 24(12 part 2): 203S - 15S

The Antibiotic Pipeline

Improving Antibiotic Use

McCaig et al. Emerg Infect Dis 2003; 9(4): 432-7

Abx Stewardship: Reduces Rates of MDROs

Valiquette, et al. Clin Infect Dis 2007; 45:S112.

Tertiary care hospital; Quebec, 2003-2006

Abx Stewardship: Improves Clinical Outcomes

Appropriate Cure Failure0

102030405060708090

100

AMPUP

RR 2.8 (2.1-3.8) RR 1.7 (1.3-2.1) RR 0.2 (0.1-0.4)

Perc

ent

AMP = Antibiotic Management ProgramUP = Usual PracticeFishman N. Am J Med.

2006;119:S53.

Abx Stewardship: Reduces Costs

• Team consists of a clinical pharmacist, an an ID physician and Clinical Laboratories• Methods

– Development of evidence-based guidelines– Antibiotic utilization software to identify targeted interventions– Daily interdisciplinary rounds– Education of staff

• Antimicrobial portion of inpatient drug budget: 22.9% (FY05), 20.5% (FY08) • Cost-avoidance in 2009 Budget = $600,000

12.9%

Slide courtesy of Barry Fox, Director of UWHC Antibiotic Stewardship Program

Resistance in Nursing Homes

Jarvis WR. Emerg Infect Dis 2001; 7(2): 170-3

????

MDRO in NHs: MRSA

A B C D E F Overall0

0.1

0.2

0.3

0.4

Prevalent Incident

Prop

ortio

n Co

loni

zed

(%)

Crnich et al. IDSA 2010

MDRO in NHs: FQRB

A B C D E F Overall0

0.1

0.2

0.3

0.4

Prevalent Incident

Prop

ortio

n Co

loni

zed

(%)

Crnich et al. IDSA 2010

Antimicrobial Use in LTCFs• Accounts for 40% of the medications used in

LTCF residents in older studies

• 3-13% of residents are receiving antimicrobials at any time

• 50-70% of residents will receive at least one antibiotic during the year

• 25-75% of antibiotics given for inappropriate indications

Antibiotic Use in WI NHs

β-lactams32%

MACL10%

FQ37%

Tetra4%

Sulfa13%

Other5%

Antibiotic Courses

β-lactams23%

MACL5%

FQ25%

Tetra12%

Sulfa25%

Other10%

Antibiotic Days

1 2 3 4 5 60

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

0

20

40

60

80

100

120

Total Antibiotic Courses Total Antibiotc Days

Facility

Antib

iotic

Cou

rses

per

100

0 Re

side

nt D

ays

Antib

iotic

Day

s per

100

0 Re

side

nt D

ays

Crnich et al. J Am Med Dir Assoc 2011, submitted

Antibiotic Use in WI NHs

10

102030405060708090

100

Cumulative Proportion of Antibiotic CoursesCumulative Proportion of Antibiotic Days

Total Number of Antibiotic Courses Recieved

Perc

ent o

f Res

iden

t Pop

ulati

on (%

)

No. Subjects = 449No. Abx(+) = 293 (65%)

N = 92 (21%)

Why?

Antibiotic Start Process: Hospital versus Nursing Home

Antibiotic Start Process: Hospital versus Nursing Home

Antibiotic Start Process: Hospital versus Nursing Home

Antibiotic Start Process: Hospital versus Nursing Home

Antibiotic Start Process: Hospital versus Nursing Home

Antibiotic Start Process: Hospital versus Nursing Home

Antibiotic Start Process: Hospital versus Nursing Home

Antibiotic Start Process: Hospital versus Nursing Home

J Am Med Dir Assoc 2005; 6(2): 109-12

• 221 post-acute care residents admitted to 7 Georgia NHs followed for a year

• 105/221 (48%) received at least one course of antibiotics

• 50% were NH-initiated

• 43% of NH-initiated courses had no documentation of infection in medical record

• 67% of NH started antibiotics initiated over the phone

Antibiotic Start Process: Hospital versus Nursing Home

Nurse-Physician Communication

• Ineffective communication involved in 60% of medical errors

• Improving N-P communication in LTCFs became a NPSG in 2008

• Quality of interactions viewed as suboptimal by both parties

Gerontol 1989; 29(4): 502-10

• 40/83 (48.2%) considered avoidable

• 70% due to inadequate diagnostic or treatment facilities

• 15% due to pressure from family/staff

• 15% due to suboptimal communication

– MD not available– Assessment of resident

suboptimal

• 15 of 21 nurses viewed preparation as critical to effective N-P communication

• Barriers to preparation– Relevant clinical information not all in one place– Assessment incomplete at time of call– Delays in MD returning call

J Patient Saf 2009; 5(3): 145-52

Research Question: Does the quality of telephone/fax communication between nursing staff and off-site prescribers influence the appropriateness of antibiotic prescriptions in NHs?

Research Objectives• Understand how the communication

process influences decisions to start antibiotics in NHs

• Use this information to promote more effective communication between NH staff and off-site prescribers

• Reduce unnecessary and suboptimal antibiotic use in NHs

Study Aims• Specific Aim #1: Assess the content of

telephone/fax communication between nursing staff and off-site prescribers

• Specific Aim #2: Determine if the absence of specific elements of content are associated with higher rates of inappropriate antibiotic prescribing

• Specific Aim #3: Explore the influence that factors other than communication have on the prescription of antibiotics

Study Design

• Mixed-methods observational study

• Core data collection methods will be developed and validated in a single pilot facility

• Plan to expand to multiple facilities following the pilot

Measurement of Communication

• The content of communication events associated with an antibiotic start will obtained:– Telephone conversations between NH staff and

off-site providers will be recorded– Copies of fax communications will be obtained

• The conveyance of specific elements with each communication event will be abstracted onto standard case report forms

Assessment of Appropriateness of Antibiotic Starts

• Data related to each antibiotic start will be collected and abstracted onto standard CRFs

• Structured implicit review will be used to determine appropriateness– Each member of an expert multidisciplinary panel

will review CRFs independently– Score as appropriate, inappropriate, indeterminate– Consensus on discrepancies between panel

members will be achieved through group consensus

Assessment of Non-Communication Factors

• Semi-structured interviews with NH staff and off-site prescribers involved with antibiotic start events will be performed.

• Audio tapes of communication events will be used to facilitate memory of prescribing event.

• Transcripts of interviews will be analyzed using a grounded theory approach

Thank You

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