Abstract

BackgroundUncomplicated urinary tract infections (UTIs) can often be diagnosed based solely on symptoms and should be treated with a short course of narrow spectrum antibiotics. However, clinicians often order urine analyses and prescribe long courses of broad spectrum antibiotics.ObjectiveThe objectives of our study are: 1) Understand how primary care providers and residents clinically approach UTIs and 2) to understand specific opportunities, based on provider type, to target future antibiotic stewardship interventions.Design and participantsWe conducted semi-structured qualitative interviews of community primary care providers (n = 15) and internal medicine residents (n = 15) in St. Louis, Missouri from 2018–2019. A 5-point Likert scale was used to evaluate participant preferences for possible interventions. Interviews were transcribed, de-identified, and coded by two independent researchers using a combination inductive and deductive approach.Key resultsSeveral common themes emerged. Both providers and residents ordered urine tests to “confirm” presence of urinary tract infections. Antibiotic prescription decisions were often based on historical practice and anecdotal experience rather than local susceptibility data or clinical practice guidelines. Community providers were more comfortable treating patients over the phone than residents and tended to prescribe longer courses of antibiotics. Both community providers and residents voiced frustrations with guidelines being difficult to easily incorporate due to length and extraneous information. Preferences for receiving and incorporating guidelines into practice varied. Both groups felt benchmarking would improve prescribing practices but had reservations about implementation. Community providers preferred pragmatic clinical decision support systems and nurse triage algorithms. Residents preferred order sets.ConclusionsSignificant opportunities exist to optimize urinary tract infection management among residents and community providers. Multifaceted interventions that include provider education, synthesis of guidelines, and pragmatic clinical decision support systems are needed to improve antibiotic prescribing and diagnostic testing; optimal interventions to improve UTI management may vary based on provider training level.

Highlights

  • Multifaceted interventions that include provider education, synthesis of guidelines, and pragmatic clinical decision support systems are needed to improve antibiotic prescribing and diagnostic testing; optimal interventions to improve urinary tract infections (UTIs) management may vary based on provider training level

  • Urinary tract infections (UTIs) account for over 10 million ambulatory visits and 2–3 million emergency department visits annually and are among the most common conditions for which antibiotics are prescribed in the outpatient setting [1, 2]

  • Grigoryan et al found that fluoroquinolones remained the most common antibiotic class prescribed for UTIs and the duration of prescriptions was longer than recommended [11]

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Summary

Introduction

Urinary tract infections (UTIs) account for over 10 million ambulatory visits and 2–3 million emergency department visits annually and are among the most common conditions for which antibiotics are prescribed in the outpatient setting [1, 2]. Clinical practice guidelines by the Infectious Diseases Society of America (IDSA), which recommend short treatment courses of narrow spectrum antibiotics, are not routinely followed by clinicians [10]. Durkin et al used a large national administrative database to show that non-guideline recommended antibiotic prescribing was common and that over 75% of prescriptions were for the wrong treatment duration [12]. Uncomplicated urinary tract infections (UTIs) can often be diagnosed based solely on symptoms and should be treated with a short course of narrow spectrum antibiotics. Clinicians often order urine analyses and prescribe long courses of broad spectrum antibiotics

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