Antimicrobial stewardship using electronic prescribing systems in hospital settings: a scoping review of interventions and outcome measures

Author:

Jenkins J A12,Pontefract S K12,Cresswell K3,Williams R3,Sheikh A3,Coleman J J12

Affiliation:

1. University Hospitals Birmingham NHS Foundation Trust , Birmingham, B15 2GW , UK

2. Institute of Clinical Sciences, University of Birmingham , Birmingham, B15 2TT , UK

3. Usher Institute, The University of Edinburgh , Edinburgh, EH16 4UX , UK

Abstract

Abstract Objectives To identify interventions implemented in hospital electronic prescribing systems and the outcome measures used to monitor their impact. Methods We systematically searched CINAHL, EMBASE, Google Scholar and Medline using keywords in three strands: (i) population: hospital inpatient or emergency department; (ii) intervention: electronic prescribing functionality; and (iii) outcome: antimicrobial stewardship. The interventions were grouped into six themes: alerts, order sets, restriction of access, mandated documentation, embedded guidelines and automatic prescription stop. The outcome measures were organized into those that measure the quality or quantity of prescribing or clinical decision support (CDS) activity. The impact of each intervention reported was grouped into a positive, negative or no change. Results A total of 28 studies were eligible for inclusion. There were 28 different interventions grouped into the six themes. Alerts visible to the practitioner in the electronic health record (EHR) were most frequently implemented (n = 11/28). Twenty different outcome measures were identified, divided into quality (n = 13/20) and quantity outcomes (n = 4/20) and CDS activity (n = 3/20). One-third of outcomes reported across the 28 studies showed positive change (34.4%, n = 42/122) and 61.4% (n = 75/122) showed no change. Conclusions The most frequently implemented interventions were alerts, the majority of which were to influence behaviour or decision-making of the practitioner within the EHR. Quality outcomes were most frequently selected by researchers. The review supports previous research that larger well-designed randomized studies are needed to investigate the impact of interventions on AMS and outcome measures to be standardized.

Funder

National Institute for Health Research

NIHR

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

General Medicine

Reference45 articles.

1. Global Action Plan on Antimicrobial Resistance;WHO,2015

2. Antimicrobial Stewardship: Systems and Processes ford Effective Antimicrobial Medicine Use—NICE Guideline [NG15];NICE,2015

3. Approaches to promoting the appropriate use of antibiotics through hospital electronic prescribing systems: a scoping review;Cresswell;Int J Pharm Pract,2017

4. Quality indicators for responsible antibiotic use in the inpatient setting: a systematic review followed by an international multidisciplinary consensus procedure;Monnier;J Antimicrob Chemother,2018

5. Metrics for quantifying antibiotic use in the hospital setting: results from a systematic review and international multidisciplinary consensus procedure;Stanic Benic;J Antimicrob Chemother,2018

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