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. 2023 Feb 20;12:2022-8-2. doi: 10.7573/dic.2022-8-2

Table 1.

Strategies and methods of outpatient antimicrobial stewardship programmes.

Category Methods of implementation Strengths Challenges
Prospective audit and feedback
  • Dedicate a physician/pharmacist to review prescriptions

  • Provide rapid feedback to ordering provider on individual prescriptions

  • Consider starting with a single antibiotic class or disease state

  • Individualized interventions with relatively immediate feedback

  • Time consuming

  • Dedicated personnel necessary

  • Requires frequent review and often manual chart review

Personalized prescription feedback
  • Summary of antibiotic prescription data for individual prescribers

  • May be presented in comparison to similar peers or clinics

  • Can be conducted over review periods

  • Does not require daily review

  • Can compare to other providers

  • May require some manual chart review to determine appropriateness of antibiotics

Patient education
  • Educational printouts

  • Posters in healthcare facilities

  • One-on-one discussion with a member of healthcare team

  • Can be personalized to the patient group/disease state

  • Varying education levels of patients

Provider education
  • Training on how to maintain patient satisfaction without prescribing antimicrobials

  • Education provided at already scheduled and recurring meetings covering the inappropriate and appropriate use of antimicrobials and the associated risks and benefits

  • Education can be provided by an infectious diseases/antimicrobial stewardship practitioner either directly to prescribers or to unit leaders who will disseminate information

  • Ideal option for multidisciplinary antimicrobial stewardship teams that can appeal to their peers

  • Can be incorporated into already scheduled/recurring meetings

  • Does not require one person to lead all training

  • Frequent updates may be necessary

Institutional guidelines
  • Individualized guidance for a specific infectious syndrome with recommended drug, dose and duration

  • Development of outpatient antibiograms to guide antibiotic selection

  • Use literature-backed guideline recommendations in combination with local resistance patterns

  • May disseminate on paper, via email and/or posted on healthcare intranet sites

  • Accessible for referencing by providers

  • Specific to one’s institution, infectious syndrome

  • Evidence-based recommendations

  • Requires work up front and may require leadership buy-in to implement

  • Updates required as national guidelines change

Computerized order-entry sets
  • Provide selections for drug, dose and duration for individual infections based on guidelines

  • Include lab-ordering recommendations

  • Real-time recommendation implementation

  • Does not require any action outside of usual practice by practitioners

  • Requires information technology support

Clinical decision-support algorithms
  • May be integrated into the electronic health record

  • Uses symptoms and diagnoses to guide providers to treatment recommendations based on guidelines and local susceptibility profiles

  • Does not require any action outside of usual practice by practitioners

  • Real-time recommendation implementation

  • Requires information technology support

Educational pop-ups/warnings in the electronic health record
  • Electronic alerts to provide clinical pearls to an ordering provider

  • May include suggestions regarding need for antibiotics, selection, dose or duration of therapy

  • Real-time recommendation implementation

  • Requires information technology support

Note templates with treatment options
  • Templates for use by ordering providers to guide decision-making

  • Can include discussion/educational points to address with the patient

  • Serves as both an educational and workflow-streamlining tool

  • Real-time recommendation implementation

  • Requires information technology support

Delayed antibiotic prescribing
  • Watchful waiting for infections where antibiotics may not be necessary

  • Encourage discussion with patients regarding risks and benefits of antibiotics

  • Can avoid writing prescription and request follow up if necessary, or can write prescription and instruct patient not to fill unless necessary

  • May avoid unnecessary antibiotics

  • Requires close follow up for patients for whom delayed antibiotic prescribing has been provided

Point of care testing
  • Rapidly available results can guide need for antibiotics and selection

  • Viral point of care testing can be helpful in ruling out bacterial infections and the need for antibiotics

  • Point of care allergy testing may be beneficial to determine true allergies and need for less-optimal, alternative (non-first line) antibiotics

  • May be able to avoid antibiotics or less-optimal antibiotics

  • Requires additional training and resources to perform