Antibiotic intravenous-to-oral switch guidelines: barriers to adherence and possible solutions

View/ open
Author
Warburton, James
Hodson, Karen
James, Delyth
Date
2014-10Type
Article
Publisher
Wiley
ISSN
2042-7174
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
To identify reasons for poor adherence to antibiotic intravenous-to-oral switch guidelines and to explore the possible solutions. To rate the importance of the barriers and solutions identified, as perceived by a multidisciplinary expert panel. Three-round Delphi study in an expert panel comprising doctors, nurses and pharmacists, with concurrent semi-structured interviews. The three rounds of the Delphi were completed by 13 out of the 30 healthcare professionals invited to participate. No nurses were included in the final round. Consensus was achieved for 28 out of 35 statements, with the most important barrier being that of inappropriate antibiotic review at the weekend, and the most important solution being to raise guideline awareness. The findings from the seven interviews (three doctors, two pharmacists and two nurses) complemented those from the Delphi study, although they provided more specific suggestions on how to improve the adherence to guidelines. This study, using a combination of quantitative and qualitative methods, has identified several barriers to explore further and offered many practical solutions to improve practice. The importance of a multidisciplinary approach to address guideline non-adherence was emphasised. Clinical guidelines must be well publicised and well written to prevent a feeling of guideline saturation in the healthcare populous. Novel approaches may have to be investigated in order to further encourage adherence with antibiotic intravenous-to-oral switch guidelines.
Journal/conference proceeding
International Journal of Pharmacy Practice;
Citation
Warburton, J., Hodson, K. and James, D. (2014) 'Antibiotic intravenous-to-oral switch guidelines: barriers to adherence and possible solutions', International Journal of Pharmacy Practice, 22(5), pp.345-353
Description
Published in International Journal of Pharmacy Practice - available http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/ijpp.12086
Collections
- Un-themed [116]
Related items
Showing items related by title, author, subject and abstract.
-
In the patient’s shoes: The experience of diet modification from the perspectives of speech and language therapy (SLT) students
Edwards, Samantha (Cardiff Metropolitan University, 2017)Background: Research into the various factors underlying non-adherence with dysphagia recommendations is limited. Non-adherence is a complex issue that can challenge clinicians managing the condition, as it has been found ... -
The sensitivity to honey of Gram-positive cocci of clinical significance isolated from wounds
Cooper, Rose; Molan, P.C.; Harding, K.G. (Wiley, 2002)Aims: To determine the sensitivity to honey of Gram-positive cocci of clinical significance in wounds and demonstrate that inhibition is not exclusively due to osmotic effects. Methods and Results: Eighteen strains of ... -
High-intensity interval training versus moderate-intensity steady-state training in UK cardiac rehabilitation programmes (HIIT or MISS UK): study protocol for a multicentre randomised controlled trial and economic evaluation
McGregor, Gordon; Nichols, Simon; Hamborg, Thomas; Bryning, Lucy; Tudor-Edwards, Rhiannon; Markland, David; Mercer, Jenny; Birkett, Stefan; Ennis, Stuart; Powell, Richard; Begg, Brian; Haykowsky, Mark J; Banerjee, Prithwish; Ingle, Lee; Shave, Rob; Backx, Karianne (BMJ Publishing Group, 2016-11-16)Introduction Current international guidelines for cardiac rehabilitation (CR) advocate moderate-intensity exercise training (MISS, moderate-intensity steady state). This recommendation predates significant advances in ...