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926. Shorter. Safer. Better. Pledge Campaign to Increase Uptake of Shortest Effective Durations of Antimicrobial Therapy

BACKGROUND: Patients often receive longer-than-needed antimicrobial treatment for common infections, when a shorter duration would be equally effective. To promote use of evidence-based durations, the University of North Carolina Medical Center’s (MC) Carolina Antimicrobial Stewardship Program (CASP...

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Autores principales: Doughman, Danielle, Marx, Ashley H, Mavrogiorgos, Nikolaos
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9751697/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ofid/ofac492.771
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author Doughman, Danielle
Marx, Ashley H
Mavrogiorgos, Nikolaos
author_facet Doughman, Danielle
Marx, Ashley H
Mavrogiorgos, Nikolaos
author_sort Doughman, Danielle
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Patients often receive longer-than-needed antimicrobial treatment for common infections, when a shorter duration would be equally effective. To promote use of evidence-based durations, the University of North Carolina Medical Center’s (MC) Carolina Antimicrobial Stewardship Program (CASP) developed best practices (BPs) in 2020 to inform prescribing. CASP conducted a signature pledge campaign to encourage nurses, pharmacists, prescribers, and allies to know, use, and share BPs. METHODS: CASP developed a pledge form on a password-protected MC intranet site. Participants selected way(s) to “action” their pledge from a pre-filled list. CASP delivered coordinated messages to nurses, pharmacists, prescribers, and allied groups using multiple platforms: tiered safety huddles, leadership meetings, MC news, email, social media, and the CASP website over a 35-day campaign period that culminated with Antibiotics Awareness Week. Measures of campaign effectiveness included number of pledgers, intranet views of BPs, reported awareness and use of BPs by pledgers at the time of pledge and in a 90-days post-campaign electronic survey, and pledge actions fulfilled. Survey responses were cross-tabulated and analyzed using descriptive statistics. RESULTS: 238 MC staff signed the pledge; nurses comprised 21%, pharmacists 24%, prescribers 48%, and allies 7%. At time of pledge, 39% reported prior awareness of BPs (Figure 1); 39% reported prior use of BPs. 99% selected at least one action at time of pledge. 116 (49%) responded to the 90-day post campaign survey. 84% reported taking at least one action. The most common action reported among nurses was patient education (36%); among pharmacists, identifying too-long durations for query (78%); among prescribers, BP use and patient education were tied at 60%. The BPs page was viewed 323 times during campaign, compared to 153 total pre-campaign views. Prescribers’ BP use increased 66% from time of pledge. 90 days post-pledge, all groups except allies reported increased use of BPs since pledging (Figure 2). Awareness of CASP Best Practices for Durations of Therapy resource among pledgers at time of signature. [Figure: see text] Reported use of CASP Best Practices for Duration of Therapy resource at the time of pledge and at time of survey, 90-days post campaign. [Figure: see text] CONCLUSION: A pledge campaign to increase awareness and uptake of shortest effective durations was effective except among allies. Further analysis is needed to determine if durations for common infections are similar to the BP ranges post-campaign. DISCLOSURES: All Authors: No reported disclosures.
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spelling pubmed-97516972022-12-16 926. Shorter. Safer. Better. Pledge Campaign to Increase Uptake of Shortest Effective Durations of Antimicrobial Therapy Doughman, Danielle Marx, Ashley H Mavrogiorgos, Nikolaos Open Forum Infect Dis Abstracts BACKGROUND: Patients often receive longer-than-needed antimicrobial treatment for common infections, when a shorter duration would be equally effective. To promote use of evidence-based durations, the University of North Carolina Medical Center’s (MC) Carolina Antimicrobial Stewardship Program (CASP) developed best practices (BPs) in 2020 to inform prescribing. CASP conducted a signature pledge campaign to encourage nurses, pharmacists, prescribers, and allies to know, use, and share BPs. METHODS: CASP developed a pledge form on a password-protected MC intranet site. Participants selected way(s) to “action” their pledge from a pre-filled list. CASP delivered coordinated messages to nurses, pharmacists, prescribers, and allied groups using multiple platforms: tiered safety huddles, leadership meetings, MC news, email, social media, and the CASP website over a 35-day campaign period that culminated with Antibiotics Awareness Week. Measures of campaign effectiveness included number of pledgers, intranet views of BPs, reported awareness and use of BPs by pledgers at the time of pledge and in a 90-days post-campaign electronic survey, and pledge actions fulfilled. Survey responses were cross-tabulated and analyzed using descriptive statistics. RESULTS: 238 MC staff signed the pledge; nurses comprised 21%, pharmacists 24%, prescribers 48%, and allies 7%. At time of pledge, 39% reported prior awareness of BPs (Figure 1); 39% reported prior use of BPs. 99% selected at least one action at time of pledge. 116 (49%) responded to the 90-day post campaign survey. 84% reported taking at least one action. The most common action reported among nurses was patient education (36%); among pharmacists, identifying too-long durations for query (78%); among prescribers, BP use and patient education were tied at 60%. The BPs page was viewed 323 times during campaign, compared to 153 total pre-campaign views. Prescribers’ BP use increased 66% from time of pledge. 90 days post-pledge, all groups except allies reported increased use of BPs since pledging (Figure 2). Awareness of CASP Best Practices for Durations of Therapy resource among pledgers at time of signature. [Figure: see text] Reported use of CASP Best Practices for Duration of Therapy resource at the time of pledge and at time of survey, 90-days post campaign. [Figure: see text] CONCLUSION: A pledge campaign to increase awareness and uptake of shortest effective durations was effective except among allies. Further analysis is needed to determine if durations for common infections are similar to the BP ranges post-campaign. DISCLOSURES: All Authors: No reported disclosures. Oxford University Press 2022-12-15 /pmc/articles/PMC9751697/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ofid/ofac492.771 Text en © The Author(s) 2022. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of Infectious Diseases Society of America. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted reuse, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Abstracts
Doughman, Danielle
Marx, Ashley H
Mavrogiorgos, Nikolaos
926. Shorter. Safer. Better. Pledge Campaign to Increase Uptake of Shortest Effective Durations of Antimicrobial Therapy
title 926. Shorter. Safer. Better. Pledge Campaign to Increase Uptake of Shortest Effective Durations of Antimicrobial Therapy
title_full 926. Shorter. Safer. Better. Pledge Campaign to Increase Uptake of Shortest Effective Durations of Antimicrobial Therapy
title_fullStr 926. Shorter. Safer. Better. Pledge Campaign to Increase Uptake of Shortest Effective Durations of Antimicrobial Therapy
title_full_unstemmed 926. Shorter. Safer. Better. Pledge Campaign to Increase Uptake of Shortest Effective Durations of Antimicrobial Therapy
title_short 926. Shorter. Safer. Better. Pledge Campaign to Increase Uptake of Shortest Effective Durations of Antimicrobial Therapy
title_sort 926. shorter. safer. better. pledge campaign to increase uptake of shortest effective durations of antimicrobial therapy
topic Abstracts
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9751697/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ofid/ofac492.771
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