Antimicrobial stewardship: a qualitative study of the development of national guidelines for antibiotic use in hospitals

Abstract Background As effective antibiotics are becoming a scarce resource, governmental regulation is needed to promote responsible use. Implementation of antibiotic stewardship and practice guidelines in health care facilities seems to be crucial to this effort. Empirical studies suggest, however...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Eli Feiring, Anne Berit Walter
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2017-11-01
Series:BMC Health Services Research
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12913-017-2683-4
id doaj-b1d5a2853b0e45ac87ca8b8f7143c933
record_format Article
spelling doaj-b1d5a2853b0e45ac87ca8b8f7143c9332020-11-25T00:57:52ZengBMCBMC Health Services Research1472-69632017-11-0117111110.1186/s12913-017-2683-4Antimicrobial stewardship: a qualitative study of the development of national guidelines for antibiotic use in hospitalsEli Feiring0Anne Berit Walter1Department of Health Management and Health Economics, University of OsloDepartment of Life Sciences and Health, Oslo and Akershus University College of Applied SciencesAbstract Background As effective antibiotics are becoming a scarce resource, governmental regulation is needed to promote responsible use. Implementation of antibiotic stewardship and practice guidelines in health care facilities seems to be crucial to this effort. Empirical studies suggest, however, that guidelines have limited influence on health professionals’ behavior and practice. Barriers and facilitators to guideline implementability are much studied, but little attention has been given to health professionals’ perceptions of normative acceptability of guidelines as a condition for compliance. The aim of the present study was first, to examine if and how aspects potentially promoting acceptability and compliance among clinical target users were addressed during development of Norwegian national guidelines for antibiotic use in hospitals and second, to identify procedural characteristics of the development process that were perceived by target users to yield legitimate guidelines. Methods Qualitative deductive thematic analysis was used. A theoretical framework inspired by the AGREE II Instrument and the Accountability for reasonableness framework assisted data gathering and interpretation. Archival data was collected and used to detail the guideline development process. Semi-structured, in-depth interviews with eight clinicians with extensive knowledge of the guidelines were carried out. Results Guideline development was characterized by i) broad agreement about scope and purpose, ii) broad involvement of stakeholders in the development process, iii) use of systematic methods to search for and apply evidence, iv) easily identifiable and specific recommendations, v) provision of tools on how to put recommendations into practice, and vi) editorial independence. Several procedural characteristics were perceived by the interviewees as promoting guideline legitimacy; i) diverse perspectives systematically involved in the process, ii) accessibility and transparency of the rationales for decision making, iii) opportunities for appeals and reconsiderations, and iv) regulative authority. Conclusions This study provides insights as to how guidelines that are intended to promote responsible use of antibiotics in hospitals can be carefully developed to facilitate perceptions of relevance, transparency, and authority by health professionals.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12913-017-2683-4Antimicrobial resistanceQualitative studyImplementationGuidelinesEvidence-based public healthAccountability for reasonableness
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Eli Feiring
Anne Berit Walter
spellingShingle Eli Feiring
Anne Berit Walter
Antimicrobial stewardship: a qualitative study of the development of national guidelines for antibiotic use in hospitals
BMC Health Services Research
Antimicrobial resistance
Qualitative study
Implementation
Guidelines
Evidence-based public health
Accountability for reasonableness
author_facet Eli Feiring
Anne Berit Walter
author_sort Eli Feiring
title Antimicrobial stewardship: a qualitative study of the development of national guidelines for antibiotic use in hospitals
title_short Antimicrobial stewardship: a qualitative study of the development of national guidelines for antibiotic use in hospitals
title_full Antimicrobial stewardship: a qualitative study of the development of national guidelines for antibiotic use in hospitals
title_fullStr Antimicrobial stewardship: a qualitative study of the development of national guidelines for antibiotic use in hospitals
title_full_unstemmed Antimicrobial stewardship: a qualitative study of the development of national guidelines for antibiotic use in hospitals
title_sort antimicrobial stewardship: a qualitative study of the development of national guidelines for antibiotic use in hospitals
publisher BMC
series BMC Health Services Research
issn 1472-6963
publishDate 2017-11-01
description Abstract Background As effective antibiotics are becoming a scarce resource, governmental regulation is needed to promote responsible use. Implementation of antibiotic stewardship and practice guidelines in health care facilities seems to be crucial to this effort. Empirical studies suggest, however, that guidelines have limited influence on health professionals’ behavior and practice. Barriers and facilitators to guideline implementability are much studied, but little attention has been given to health professionals’ perceptions of normative acceptability of guidelines as a condition for compliance. The aim of the present study was first, to examine if and how aspects potentially promoting acceptability and compliance among clinical target users were addressed during development of Norwegian national guidelines for antibiotic use in hospitals and second, to identify procedural characteristics of the development process that were perceived by target users to yield legitimate guidelines. Methods Qualitative deductive thematic analysis was used. A theoretical framework inspired by the AGREE II Instrument and the Accountability for reasonableness framework assisted data gathering and interpretation. Archival data was collected and used to detail the guideline development process. Semi-structured, in-depth interviews with eight clinicians with extensive knowledge of the guidelines were carried out. Results Guideline development was characterized by i) broad agreement about scope and purpose, ii) broad involvement of stakeholders in the development process, iii) use of systematic methods to search for and apply evidence, iv) easily identifiable and specific recommendations, v) provision of tools on how to put recommendations into practice, and vi) editorial independence. Several procedural characteristics were perceived by the interviewees as promoting guideline legitimacy; i) diverse perspectives systematically involved in the process, ii) accessibility and transparency of the rationales for decision making, iii) opportunities for appeals and reconsiderations, and iv) regulative authority. Conclusions This study provides insights as to how guidelines that are intended to promote responsible use of antibiotics in hospitals can be carefully developed to facilitate perceptions of relevance, transparency, and authority by health professionals.
topic Antimicrobial resistance
Qualitative study
Implementation
Guidelines
Evidence-based public health
Accountability for reasonableness
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12913-017-2683-4
work_keys_str_mv AT elifeiring antimicrobialstewardshipaqualitativestudyofthedevelopmentofnationalguidelinesforantibioticuseinhospitals
AT anneberitwalter antimicrobialstewardshipaqualitativestudyofthedevelopmentofnationalguidelinesforantibioticuseinhospitals
_version_ 1725222545655857152