Abstract

BackgroundAudit and feedback (A&F) that shows how health professionals compare to those of their peers, can be an effective intervention to reduce unnecessary antibiotic prescribing among family physicians. However, the most impactful design approach to A&F to achieve this aim is uncertain. We will test three design modifications of antibiotic A&F that could be readily scaled and sustained if shown to be effective: (1) inclusion of case-mix-adjusted peer comparator versus a crude comparator, (2) emphasizing harms, rather than lack of benefits, and (3) providing a viral prescription pad.MethodsWe will conduct two interrelated pragmatic randomized trials in January 2021. One trial will include family physicians in Ontario who have signed up to receive their MyPractice: Primary Care report from Ontario Health (“OH Trial”). These physicians will be cluster-randomized by practice, 1:1 to intervention or control. The intervention group will also receive a Viral Prescription Pad mailed to their office as well as added emphasis in their report on use of the pad. Ontario family physicians who have not signed up to receive their MyPractice: Primary Care report will be included in the other trial administered by Public Health Ontario (“PHO Trial”). These physicians will be allocated 4:1 to intervention or control. The intervention group will be further randomized by two factors: case-mix adjusted versus unadjusted comparator and emphasis or not on harms of antibiotics. Physicians in the intervention arm of this trial will receive one of four versions of a personalized antibiotic A&F letter from PHO. For both trials, the primary outcome is the antibiotic prescribing rate per 1000 patient visits, measured at 6 months post-randomization, the primary analysis will use Poisson regression and we will follow the intention to treat principle. A mixed-methods process evaluation will use surveys and interviews with family physicians to explore potential mechanisms underlying the observed effects, exploring targeted constructs including intention, self-efficacy, outcome expectancies, descriptive norms, and goal prioritization.DiscussionThis protocol describes the rationale and methodology of two interrelated pragmatic trials testing variations of theory-informed components of an audit and feedback intervention to determine how to optimize A&F interventions for antibiotic prescribing in primary care.Trial registrationNCT04594200, NCT05044052. CIHR Grant ID: 398514

Highlights

  • Audit and feedback (A&F) that shows how health professionals compare to those of their peers, can be an effective intervention to reduce unnecessary antibiotic prescribing among family physicians

  • The Ontario Health (OH) Trial has no control arm without A&F; usual care for participants in the OH Trial is to receive A&F and OH was unable to implement an antibiotic module in their MyPractice: Primary Care report for only a subset

  • Our prior work has shown that antibiotic prescribing for those over age 65 is a good proxy for antibiotic prescribing in ages by these clinicians (Additional File 2) and we know from previous trials that a large proportion of antibiotics prescribed in this age group are clinically inappropriate [23]

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Summary

Introduction

Audit and feedback (A&F) that shows how health professionals compare to those of their peers, can be an effective intervention to reduce unnecessary antibiotic prescribing among family physicians. Audit and feedback (A&F) can act as an effective intervention to reduce unnecessary antibiotic use in primary care [4,5,6,7]. Peer comparison A&F that shows how health professionals compare to those of their peers, can be an effective intervention for reducing antibiotic prescribing volume among family physicians [4, 6, 8]. Questions remain regarding the optimal way to incorporate these elements in A&F interventions and there is a need to test different designs comparatively (head-to-head). Analyses have shown that prescribing behaviour has fluctuated since the pandemic [10,11,12,13] and this may lead recipients of feedback to dismiss the validity of the audit when they see their prescribing has dropped

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