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. 2020 Jul 9;20:237. doi: 10.1186/s12877-020-01564-1

Table 3.

Intervention types - definitions, examples, frequency and association with intervention outcomes

Intervention Type Definitiona Example No. used in very promising intervention No. used in quite promising interventions No. used in not promising interventions Total no. of times used across all interventions Promise ratio
Enablement Increasing means/ reducing barriers to increase capability (beyond education or training) or opportunity (beyond environmental restructuring) Providing feedback on prescribing e.g. sending prescribing profiles for the previous 3 months to prescribers at intervention sites [55] 7 8 4 19 3.75
Education Increasing knowledge or understanding Guidelines stating the recommended empirical antibiotic to be administered [61] 7 6 3 16 4.33
Training Imparting skills Delivering training sessions on how to use algorithms to support antibiotic prescription decision making [68] 3 4 2 9 3.5
Modelling Providing an example for people to aspire to or imitate Training sessions providing hypothetical case scenarios demonstrating the behaviour [68] 1 3 0 4
Environmental Restructuring Changing the physical or social context Assigning a team member to a new role [54] 6 7 4 17 3.25
Incentivisation Creating an expectation of reward Payment to intervention facilities to incentivise compliance to guidelines [53] 0 1 0 1
Restriction Using rules to reduce the opportunity to engage in the target behaviour (or to increase the target behaviour by reducing the opportunity to engage in a competing behaviour) Enforcing mandatory attendance to training on antimicrobial prescribing [53] 0 1 0 1
Persuasion Using communication to induce positive or negative feelings or stimulate action Using credible sources (such as colleagues perceived to be experts in infectious diseases) to reinforce messages from training, education sessions or guidelines [67] 7 3 2 12 5

aDefinitions from [41].