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Think twice: A cognitive perspective of an antibiotic timeout intervention to improve antibiotic use.

Authors :
Jones M
Butler J
Graber CJ
Glassman P
Samore MH
Pollack LA
Weir C
Goetz MB
Source :
Journal of biomedical informatics [J Biomed Inform] 2017 Jul; Vol. 71S, pp. S22-S31. Date of Electronic Publication: 2016 Jun 18.
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

Objectives: To understand clinicians' impressions of and decision-making processes regarding an informatics-supported antibiotic timeout program to re-evaluate the appropriateness of continuing vancomycin and piperacillin/tazobactam.<br />Methods: We implemented a multi-pronged informatics intervention, based on Dual Process Theory, to prompt discontinuation of unwarranted vancomycin and piperacillin/tazobactam on or after day three in a large Veterans Affairs Medical Center. Two workflow changes were introduced to facilitate cognitive deliberation about continuing antibiotics at day three: (1) teams completed an electronic template note, and (2) a paper summary of clinical and antibiotic-related information was provided to clinical teams. Shortly after starting the intervention, six focus groups were conducted with users or potential users. Interviews were recorded and transcribed. Iterative thematic analysis identified recurrent themes from feedback.<br />Results: Themes that emerged are represented by the following quotations: (1) captures and controls attention ("it reminds us to think about it"), (2) enhances informed and deliberative reasoning ("it makes you think twice"), (3) redirects decision direction ("…because [there was no indication] I just [discontinued] it without even trying"), (4) fosters autonomy and improves team empowerment ("the template… forces the team to really discuss it"), and (5) limits use of emotion-based heuristics ("my clinical concern is high enough I think they need more aggressive therapy…").<br />Conclusions: Requiring template completion to continue antibiotics nudged clinicians to re-assess the appropriateness of specified antibiotics. Antibiotic timeouts can encourage deliberation on overprescribed antibiotics without substantially curtailing autonomy. An effective nudge should take into account clinician's time, workflow, and thought processes.<br /> (Published by Elsevier Inc.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1532-0480
Volume :
71S
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Journal of biomedical informatics
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
27327529
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jbi.2016.06.005