Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT04187742

Feedback to Improve Rational Strategies of Antibiotic Initiation and Duration in Long Term Care (FIRST AID -LTC) - Phase 2

Feedback to Improve Rational Strategies of Antibiotic Initiation and Duration in Long Term Care (Phase 2)

Status
Completed
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
421 (actual)
Sponsor
Institute for Clinical Evaluative Sciences · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

There is a high rate of inappropriate antibiotic use in LTC facilities, with both unnecessary initiation and prolongation of treatments. Although there are challenges to rational antibiotic use in LTC, the variability in antibiotic initiation and use of prolonged treatment durations is driven by prescriber tendencies rather than resident characteristics. Audit-and-feedback is a well-established intervention to improve professional practices, and is ideally suited for use to improve antibiotic prescribing tendencies in LTC. The literature is saturated with trials indicating benefit of audit-and-feedback, but is in dire need of studies to identify methods to improve the impact of this technique. Health Quality Ontario (HQO), a key partner in the FIRST AID-LTC research program, is already providing audit-and-feedback for other inappropriate prescribing practices in LTC, and has identified antibiotic prescribing as a priority focus.

Detailed description

The overarching goals of FIRST AID - LTC are two-fold: 1. Improve rational antibiotic prescribing by physicians to minimize harms among LTC residents. 2. Advance the science of audit-and-feedback to improve physician prescribing practices. Specific Aims To advance audit-and-feedback implementation science: 1\. by determining whether social comparison incentives, personal maintenance of certification incentives, and informing physicians of their report opening status (i.e., never opened a report vs. opened at least one report), can lead to increased opening of the feedback report and greater reductions in antibiotic use than standard email messaging. Anticipated Contributions to Health-Related Knowledge Although the literature is inundated with trials examining the impact of audit-and-feedback compared to usual care, there is a need for studies to improve audit-and-feedback delivery. FIRST AID-LTC will test optimal delivery and peer comparison techniques for audit-and-feedback. The knowledge learned can be extrapolated to antibiotic interventions in LTC in other provinces across Canada, as well more broadly to inappropriate medication prescribing practices in LTC. Anticipated Contributions to Health Care, Health Systems and Health Outcomes FIRST AID-LTC will lead to immediate reductions in excess antibiotic use in Ontario LTC facilities, which in turn should result in substantial reductions in direct drug costs, as well as downstream complications of allergy, organ toxicity, C. difficile infections and antimicrobial resistance. With easy transferability to other Canadian provinces, the improvements in cost-savings and patient outcomes could be massive in scope.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
BEHAVIORALSocial Comparison Email vs. Standard EmailEvaluate whether emails with social comparison incentives will encourage greater report opening by physicians leading to greater reductions in antibiotic use, than a standard email without social comparison incentives
BEHAVIORALMaintenance Certification Email vs. Standard EmailEvaluate whether emails with maintenance certification incentives will encourage greater report opening by physicians leading to greater reductions in antibiotic use, than a standard email without social comparison incentives
BEHAVIORALReport Opening Status Email vs. Standard Email (among previous report openers and non-openers)Evaluate whether emails informing physicians of their report opening status (among those who have previously opened at least one report and those who have never opened a report) will encourage greater report opening by physicians leading to greater reductions in antibiotic use, than a standard email without report opening status information

Timeline

Start date
2017-05-15
Primary completion
2021-09-30
Completion
2022-03-31
First posted
2019-12-05
Last updated
2022-04-07

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Canada

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT04187742. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.