Summary information

Study title

Antibiotic Prescribing in Care Homes: A Multidisciplinary Approach, 2022

Creator

Marwick, C, University of Dundee
Grant, S, University of Dundee
Dickson, J, University of Dundee
Lorencatto, F, University College London
Atkins, L, University College London
Herbec, A, University College London

Study number / PID

856006 (UKDA)

10.5255/UKDA-SN-856006 (DOI)

Data access

Restricted

Series

Not available

Abstract

ARCH was a multidisciplinary, four Work Package, project involving key stakeholders to improve understanding, and ultimately practice, around infection detection/management and antibiotic use in care homes for older people. WP1 used statistical analysis of anonymised quantitative data, finding wide variation in antibiotic prescribing rates, and informing selection of care homes for WP2/3. WP1 data are held by Health Informatics Centre (HIC), University of Dundee (https://www.dundee.ac.uk/hic/). WP2 and WP3 used anthropology, sociology and behavioural science to investigate individual, socio-cultural and contextual factors influencing antibiotic use, conducting ethnographic observations (61 periods, ~315hrs), interviews (n=101) and surveys (n=76) with care home managers, nurses, carers, senior carers, GPs, advanced nurse practitioners, pharmacists, residents and their relatives, across 7 care homes (survey broader). Observations and interviews highlighted variation in how suspected infections were identified and managed. Identified factors influencing antibiotic prescribing included: limited training around infections; lack of confidence in distinguishing infections from other conditions, and in ‘watchful waiting’; habitual/routine use of urine dip testing; the importance of communication internally and externally; limited handover documentation; duty of care linked to worry about ‘missing something’; antibiotic resistance a distant problem; pressure from family and residents, and; antibiotic stewardship not seen as care home staff’s role. WP4: Behavioural science intervention development frameworks were applied to integrated WP1-3 findings to identify candidate intervention strategies, prioritised by a co-design workshop (20 care home sector participants) into an intervention including: training (videos and online), appointment of Antibiotic Champions, an Assessment Flowchart, a Monitoring Tool, an SBAR (Situation-Background-Assessment-Recommendation) form...
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Methodology

Data collection period

30/09/2017 - 29/06/2022

Country

United Kingdom

Time dimension

Not available

Analysis unit

Individual
Organization
Group

Universe

Not available

Sampling procedure

Not available

Kind of data

Text
Video

Data collection mode

Deposited data include: transcripts of interviews, focus groups and a co-design workshop, and; repsonses to questionnaire surveys.Documents supporting data collection are also deposited along with co-designed intervention materials.Participants were care home managers, staff, residents and resident's relatives, plus healthcare professionals (General Practitioners (GPs) and Advanced Nurse Practitioners (ANPs) and pharmacists) involved in antibiotic use in care homes. The co-design workshop in Work Package 4 (WP4) also included representatives from wider organisations that support and/or manage care homes.Care homes for invitation to participate in WP2, WP3 and WP4 were purposively sampled based on data analysis from WP1. Within recruited care homes, individual participants were invited to paricipate through a combination of purposive (representing different staff groups/levels) and opportunistic (who was available within the overall purposive framing).Questionnaire surveys in WP3 were sent to all care homes and general practices in the study regions, not restricted to recruited care homes.

Funding information

Grant number

ES/P008224/1

Access

Publisher

UK Data Service

Publication year

2023

Terms of data access

The UK Data Archive has granted a dissemination embargo. The embargo will end on 5 July 2024 and the data will then be available in accordance with the access level selected.

Related publications

Not available