Emotional, cognitive and social factors of antimicrobial prescribing: can antimicrobial stewardship intervention be effective without addressing psycho-social factors?
Author(s) -
Valeria Donisi,
Marcella Sibani,
Elena Carrara,
Lidia Del Piccolo,
Michela Rimondini,
Fulvia Mazzaferri,
Chiara Bovo,
Evelina Tacconelli
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
journal of antimicrobial chemotherapy
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.124
H-Index - 194
eISSN - 1460-2091
pISSN - 0305-7453
DOI - 10.1093/jac/dkz308
Subject(s) - antimicrobial stewardship , psychological intervention , stewardship (theology) , cognition , multidisciplinary approach , interpersonal communication , medicine , psychology , intervention (counseling) , nursing , social psychology , psychiatry , antibiotic resistance , political science , politics , law , microbiology and biotechnology , biology , antibiotics
There is increasing evidence that psycho-social factors can influence antimicrobial prescribing practice in hospitals and the community, and represent potential barriers to antimicrobial stewardship interventions. Clinicians are conditioned both by emotional and cognitive factors based on fear, uncertainty, a set of beliefs, risk perception and cognitive bias, and by interpersonal factors established through social norms and peer and doctor–patient communication. However, a gap is emerging between research and practice, and no stewardship recommendation addresses the most appropriate human resource allocation or modalities to account for psycho-social determinants of prescribing. There is a need for translation of the evidence available from human behaviour studies to the design and implementation of stewardship interventions and policies at hospital and community levels. The integration of behaviour experts into multidisciplinary stewardship teams seems essential to positively impact on prescribers’ communication and decision-making competencies, and reduce inappropriate antibiotic prescribing.
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