Curbing inappropriate antibiotic use in the outpatient setting is both a major challenge and opportunity for antimicrobial stewardship. One of the barriers to effective intervention in this setting is the heterogeneity of providers with diverse prescribing practices.
Reference Schmidt, Spencer and Davidson1
Characterizing antibiotic prescribing patterns by provider type is a starting point to developing targeted ambulatory stewardship interventions, and prior results show that advanced practice clinicians (APCs) are more likely to prescribe antibiotics for syndromes contributing to the heaviest excesses in outpatient antibiotic consumption compared to physicians.
Reference Schmidt, Spencer and Davidson1–Reference Frost, McLean and Chow4
In the recent study “Comparison of antibiotic prescribing between physicians and advanced practice clinicians,” Hersh et al.
Reference Hersh, Shapiro, Sanchez and Hicks5
confirmed these findings. Redemonstration of this pattern highlights the need for a focus shift; understanding the reason for these differences such that targeted solutions can be designed is of utmost importance.
Hersh et al. compared antibiotic prescribing patterns between physicians and APCs using a national sample of outpatient visits from 2010 to 2018. This retrospective study of ambulatory prescriptions for acute respiratory tract infections (ARTIs), including acute otitis media, sinusitis, pharyngitis or tonsillitis, evaluates the differences in overall and first-line antibiotic prescribing (when indicated), stratified by provider type (ie, physician or APC).
Reference Hersh, Shapiro, Sanchez and Hicks5
Data were obtained from the National Ambulatory Medical Care Survey and the National Hospital Ambulatory Medical Care Survey, which are conducted annually by the National Center for Health Statistics. For ARTI visits, diagnoses were grouped into 3 tiers according to whether antibiotics were almost always indicated (tier 1), sometimes indicated (tier 2), or rarely indicated (tier 3).
Reference Hersh, Shapiro, Sanchez and Hicks5
The proportion of visits resulting in an antibiotic prescription were compared by provider type associated with the visit. For visits with a diagnosis of acute otitis media, sinusitis, or pharyngitis and tonsillitis, the proportion of visits yielding a prescription for a first-line antibiotic was assessed. The proportion of visits involving a patient with a chronic condition were also compared by provider type to assess possible case-mix differences.
Reference Hersh, Shapiro, Sanchez and Hicks5
Overall, 58% of APC-associated visits resulted in antibiotic prescriptions, compared to 52% of physician-associated visits. In subgroup analyses by age, setting, and diagnosis tier, there was a statistically significantly higher percentage of prescriptions written by APCs for children, in office settings, and for tier 2 diagnoses.
Reference Hersh, Shapiro, Sanchez and Hicks5
Multivariate analysis showed higher rates of antibiotic prescribing for APC-associated ARTI visits with tier 2 or 3 diagnoses, which suggests that APCs inappropriately prescribe antibiotics for ARTIs more frequently than physicians.
Reference Hersh, Shapiro, Sanchez and Hicks5
These results are consistent with prior work.
Reference Schmidt, Spencer and Davidson1–Reference Frost, McLean and Chow4
The reason for this discrepancy is unclear, but the researchers hypothesize that case-mix differences (though not observed in this study), varying educational emphasis on antimicrobial stewardship during training and in continuing education, and lack of APC representation in stewardship leadership roles are potential contributing factors.
Reference Hersh, Shapiro, Sanchez and Hicks5
Because the number of APCs comprising the clinician workforce continues to grow,
Reference Auerbach, Staiger and Buerhaus6
we need to better understand how antibiotic stewardship efforts in the outpatient setting can best be designed to incorporate APCs.
Prescribing patterns between APCs and physicians were similar regarding first-line antibiotic choice; however, both groups performed poorly. Results indicate a lack of first-line antibiotic selection for ∼50% of ARTI visits, consistent across all provider types, reinforcing the need for enhanced stewardship educational efforts for all provider specialties.
Reference Hersh, Shapiro, Sanchez and Hicks5
Study findings may not reflect antibiotic prescribing in all outpatient settings. Methods limit the ability to evaluate antibiotic prescribing patterns in ambulatory practices without physician oversight; thus, the frequency of inappropriate antibiotic prescribing for ARTIs by independently practicing APCs could potentially be higher than is reported in this study.
Reference Hersh, Shapiro, Sanchez and Hicks5
Other limitations include lack of inclusion of urgent care and retail centers, which are sites that have been shown to exhibit higher rates of antibiotic prescribing than other outpatient centers
Reference Palms, Hicks and Bartoces7
and which may also have resulted in a lower frequency of inappropriate antibiotic use reported compared to all outpatient settings. Also unknown is the volume of visits at each setting that may have provided insight into the role of time pressures and excess patient volume on antibiotic prescribing rates. Rates of prescriptions for other types of medications to treat ARTI (eg, decongestants, cough suppressants, inhalers, etc) between physicians and APCs were also not explored in this study. Lastly, the impact of geographic location, patient insurance, socioeconomic status, race, ethnicity, and other social determinants of health on inappropriate antibiotic prescription is a priority area of study to understand how these factors influence our behaviors as clinicians. For example, Goyal et al.
Reference Goyal, Johnson and Chamberlain8
showed higher rates of inappropriate prescribing among non-Hispanic White children. Additional studies are needed to explore this phenomenon more deeply.
These findings add to the growing body of evidence demonstrating the need to develop adaptable outpatient antimicrobial stewardship interventions as the workforce composition changes. Hersh et al.Reference Hersh, Shapiro, Sanchez and Hicks
5
have identified important starting points such as partnering with APC professional societies to develop education materials, to augment the role of antimicrobial stewardship in APC professional society meetings, and to promote APC involvement in stewardship leadership and development. Approaches should also encourage practices to employ techniques that have been shown to be effective in reducing the frequency of antibiotic prescribing, included provider-facing dashboards with peer comparisons, as well as more intensive education at practice meetings.
Reference Davidson, Gentry, Priem, Kowalkowski and Spencer9
More research is needed to elucidate why and in which specific ways prescribing practices differ between physicians and APCs, such that effective interventions can be crafted appropriately. Future research should focus on expanding the breadth of settings evaluated, including urgent-care centers, retail clinics, dental practices, etc, exploring the reasons for these differences, and evaluating the effectiveness of proposed interventions.
Curbing inappropriate antibiotic use in the outpatient setting is both a major challenge and opportunity for antimicrobial stewardship. One of the barriers to effective intervention in this setting is the heterogeneity of providers with diverse prescribing practices. Reference Schmidt, Spencer and Davidson1 Characterizing antibiotic prescribing patterns by provider type is a starting point to developing targeted ambulatory stewardship interventions, and prior results show that advanced practice clinicians (APCs) are more likely to prescribe antibiotics for syndromes contributing to the heaviest excesses in outpatient antibiotic consumption compared to physicians. Reference Schmidt, Spencer and Davidson1–Reference Frost, McLean and Chow4 In the recent study “Comparison of antibiotic prescribing between physicians and advanced practice clinicians,” Hersh et al. Reference Hersh, Shapiro, Sanchez and Hicks5 confirmed these findings. Redemonstration of this pattern highlights the need for a focus shift; understanding the reason for these differences such that targeted solutions can be designed is of utmost importance.
Hersh et al. compared antibiotic prescribing patterns between physicians and APCs using a national sample of outpatient visits from 2010 to 2018. This retrospective study of ambulatory prescriptions for acute respiratory tract infections (ARTIs), including acute otitis media, sinusitis, pharyngitis or tonsillitis, evaluates the differences in overall and first-line antibiotic prescribing (when indicated), stratified by provider type (ie, physician or APC). Reference Hersh, Shapiro, Sanchez and Hicks5
Data were obtained from the National Ambulatory Medical Care Survey and the National Hospital Ambulatory Medical Care Survey, which are conducted annually by the National Center for Health Statistics. For ARTI visits, diagnoses were grouped into 3 tiers according to whether antibiotics were almost always indicated (tier 1), sometimes indicated (tier 2), or rarely indicated (tier 3). Reference Hersh, Shapiro, Sanchez and Hicks5 The proportion of visits resulting in an antibiotic prescription were compared by provider type associated with the visit. For visits with a diagnosis of acute otitis media, sinusitis, or pharyngitis and tonsillitis, the proportion of visits yielding a prescription for a first-line antibiotic was assessed. The proportion of visits involving a patient with a chronic condition were also compared by provider type to assess possible case-mix differences. Reference Hersh, Shapiro, Sanchez and Hicks5
Overall, 58% of APC-associated visits resulted in antibiotic prescriptions, compared to 52% of physician-associated visits. In subgroup analyses by age, setting, and diagnosis tier, there was a statistically significantly higher percentage of prescriptions written by APCs for children, in office settings, and for tier 2 diagnoses. Reference Hersh, Shapiro, Sanchez and Hicks5 Multivariate analysis showed higher rates of antibiotic prescribing for APC-associated ARTI visits with tier 2 or 3 diagnoses, which suggests that APCs inappropriately prescribe antibiotics for ARTIs more frequently than physicians. Reference Hersh, Shapiro, Sanchez and Hicks5 These results are consistent with prior work. Reference Schmidt, Spencer and Davidson1–Reference Frost, McLean and Chow4
The reason for this discrepancy is unclear, but the researchers hypothesize that case-mix differences (though not observed in this study), varying educational emphasis on antimicrobial stewardship during training and in continuing education, and lack of APC representation in stewardship leadership roles are potential contributing factors. Reference Hersh, Shapiro, Sanchez and Hicks5 Because the number of APCs comprising the clinician workforce continues to grow, Reference Auerbach, Staiger and Buerhaus6 we need to better understand how antibiotic stewardship efforts in the outpatient setting can best be designed to incorporate APCs.
Prescribing patterns between APCs and physicians were similar regarding first-line antibiotic choice; however, both groups performed poorly. Results indicate a lack of first-line antibiotic selection for ∼50% of ARTI visits, consistent across all provider types, reinforcing the need for enhanced stewardship educational efforts for all provider specialties. Reference Hersh, Shapiro, Sanchez and Hicks5
Study findings may not reflect antibiotic prescribing in all outpatient settings. Methods limit the ability to evaluate antibiotic prescribing patterns in ambulatory practices without physician oversight; thus, the frequency of inappropriate antibiotic prescribing for ARTIs by independently practicing APCs could potentially be higher than is reported in this study. Reference Hersh, Shapiro, Sanchez and Hicks5 Other limitations include lack of inclusion of urgent care and retail centers, which are sites that have been shown to exhibit higher rates of antibiotic prescribing than other outpatient centers Reference Palms, Hicks and Bartoces7 and which may also have resulted in a lower frequency of inappropriate antibiotic use reported compared to all outpatient settings. Also unknown is the volume of visits at each setting that may have provided insight into the role of time pressures and excess patient volume on antibiotic prescribing rates. Rates of prescriptions for other types of medications to treat ARTI (eg, decongestants, cough suppressants, inhalers, etc) between physicians and APCs were also not explored in this study. Lastly, the impact of geographic location, patient insurance, socioeconomic status, race, ethnicity, and other social determinants of health on inappropriate antibiotic prescription is a priority area of study to understand how these factors influence our behaviors as clinicians. For example, Goyal et al. Reference Goyal, Johnson and Chamberlain8 showed higher rates of inappropriate prescribing among non-Hispanic White children. Additional studies are needed to explore this phenomenon more deeply.
These findings add to the growing body of evidence demonstrating the need to develop adaptable outpatient antimicrobial stewardship interventions as the workforce composition changes. Hersh et al.Reference Hersh, Shapiro, Sanchez and Hicks 5 have identified important starting points such as partnering with APC professional societies to develop education materials, to augment the role of antimicrobial stewardship in APC professional society meetings, and to promote APC involvement in stewardship leadership and development. Approaches should also encourage practices to employ techniques that have been shown to be effective in reducing the frequency of antibiotic prescribing, included provider-facing dashboards with peer comparisons, as well as more intensive education at practice meetings. Reference Davidson, Gentry, Priem, Kowalkowski and Spencer9
More research is needed to elucidate why and in which specific ways prescribing practices differ between physicians and APCs, such that effective interventions can be crafted appropriately. Future research should focus on expanding the breadth of settings evaluated, including urgent-care centers, retail clinics, dental practices, etc, exploring the reasons for these differences, and evaluating the effectiveness of proposed interventions.
Acknowledgments
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Conflicts of interest
All authors report no conflicts of interest relevant to this article.