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119. Performance of Infectious Diseases Specialists, Hospitalists, and Generalists in Case-Based Scenarios Illustrating Antimicrobial Stewardship Principles at 16 VA Medical Centers
Author(s) -
Christopher J. Graber,
Alissa Simon,
Yue Zhang,
Matthew Bidwell Goetz,
Makoto Jones,
Jorie Butler,
Ann F. Chou,
Peter Glassman
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
open forum infectious diseases
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.546
H-Index - 35
ISSN - 2328-8957
DOI - 10.1093/ofid/ofab466.321
Subject(s) - medicine , specialty , antimicrobial stewardship , cellulitis , family medicine , generalist and specialist species , emergency medicine , antibiotics , surgery , antibiotic resistance , ecology , habitat , microbiology and biotechnology , biology
Background As part of a project to implement and evaluate antimicrobial dashboards at selected VA facilities nationwide, we assessed provider attitudes and knowledge related to antibiotic prescribing among physicians working in inpatient settings at 16 VA facilities. Methods The online survey explored attitudes toward antimicrobial use and assessed respondents’ management of four clinical scenarios: cellulitis, community-acquired pneumonia (CAP), non-catheter-associated asymptomatic bacteriuria (NC-ASB), and catheter-associated asymptomatic bacteriuria (C-ASB). Responses were scored by assigning +1 for an answer most consistent with guidelines, 0 for a less-guideline-concordant but acceptable answer and -1 for an incorrect answer. Scores were normalized to 100% correct to 100% incorrect across all questions within a scenario, and mean scores were calculated across respondents by specialty; differences in mean score per scenario were tested using ANOVA. Results One-hundred-thirty-nine physicians completed the survey (n=19 ID physicians, 62 hospitalists, 58 generalists). Attitudes were similar across the three specialties. There was a significant difference in cellulitis scenario scores (correct responses: ID=67.4%, hospitalists=51.2%, generalists=41.8% correct, p=0.0087). Scores were not significantly different across specialties for CAP (correct responses: ID 76.2%, hospitalists 63%, generalists 56.5%, p=0.0914) and NC-ASB (correct responses; ID 63%, hospitalists 55%, generalists 36.2%, p=0.322), though ID trended higher. Lowest scores were observed for C-ASB (ID 39.5% correct, hospitalists 4% incorrect, generalists 8.5% incorrect, p=0.12). Conclusion Significant differences in performance on management of cellulitis and low overall scores on C-ASB management point to these conditions as being potentially high-yield targets for antimicrobial stewardship interventions. Disclosures Matthew B. Goetz, MD , Nothing to disclose Peter A. Glassman, MBBS , US Pharmacopeia (formerly), PAG; Kaiser Permanente (current employee, spouse ) (Advisor or Review Panel member, The above refers to USP (ended in 2020).)

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