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Healthcare worker attitudes on routine non-urological preoperative urine cultures: a qualitative assessment

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  19 September 2024

Julia E. Friberg Walhof
Affiliation:
Center for Comprehensive Access and Delivery Research and Evaluation (CADRE), Iowa City VA Healthcare System, Iowa City, IA, USA
Marin L. Schweizer
Affiliation:
William S. Middleton VA Hospital, Madison, WI, USA University of Wisconsin–Madison, Madison, WI, USA
Kalpana Gupta
Affiliation:
Division of Infectious Diseases, VA Boston Healthcare System, Boston, MA, USA Center for Healthcare Organization and Implementation Research (CHOIR), Boston Campus, VA Boston Healthcare System, Boston, MA, USA Department of Medicine, Boston University School of Medicine, Boston, MA, USA
Madisen Brown
Affiliation:
Center for Healthcare Organization and Implementation Research (CHOIR), Boston Campus, VA Boston Healthcare System, Boston, MA, USA
Daniel Suh
Affiliation:
Center for Comprehensive Access and Delivery Research and Evaluation (CADRE), Iowa City VA Healthcare System, Iowa City, IA, USA
Judith Strymish
Affiliation:
Center for Healthcare Organization and Implementation Research (CHOIR), Boston Campus, VA Boston Healthcare System, Boston, MA, USA
William J. O’Brien
Affiliation:
Center for Healthcare Organization and Implementation Research (CHOIR), Boston Campus, VA Boston Healthcare System, Boston, MA, USA
Jeffrey Chan
Affiliation:
Center for Healthcare Organization and Implementation Research (CHOIR), Boston Campus, VA Boston Healthcare System, Boston, MA, USA
Kelly Miell
Affiliation:
Center for Comprehensive Access and Delivery Research and Evaluation (CADRE), Iowa City VA Healthcare System, Iowa City, IA, USA Office of Rural Health, Veterans Rural Health Resource Center, Iowa City VA Health Care System, Iowa City, IA, USA
Vanessa Au
Affiliation:
Center for Comprehensive Access and Delivery Research and Evaluation (CADRE), Iowa City VA Healthcare System, Iowa City, IA, USA
Barbara W. Trautner
Affiliation:
Center for Innovations in Quality, Effectiveness and Safety (IQuESt), Michael E. DeBakey Veterans Affairs Medical Center, Houston, TX, USA Department of Medicine, Section of Health Services Research, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, TX, USA
Kimberly C. Dukes*
Affiliation:
Center for Comprehensive Access and Delivery Research and Evaluation (CADRE), Iowa City VA Healthcare System, Iowa City, IA, USA Division of General Internal Medicine, Carver College of Medicine, Iowa City, IA, USA
*
Corresponding author: Kimberly C. Dukes; Email: Kimberly.Dukes@va.gov
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Abstract

Objective:

Many preoperative urine cultures are of low value and may even lead to patient harms. This study sought to understand practices around ordering preoperative urine cultures and prescribing antibiotic treatment.

Design:

Open-ended, semi-structured qualitative interviews

Setting:

5 Veterans Affairs hospitals.

Participants:

Interviews with 14 surgeons (9 surgeons, 5 surgical leaders), 7 infectious disease physicians, 8 surgical advanced practice providers (APPs), 1 surgical nurse manager, 3 infectious disease pharmacists, 1 hospitalist, and 1 lab manager.

Methods:

We interviewed participants using a qualitative semi-structured interview guide. Collected data was coded inductively and with the Dual Process Model (DPM) using MAXQDA software. Data in the “Testing Decision-Making” code was further reviewed using the concept of perceived risk as a sensitizing concept.

Results:

We identified themes relating to surgeons’ concerns about de-implementing preoperative urine cultures to detect asymptomatic bacteriuria (ASB) in patients undergoing non-urological procedures: (1) anxiety and uncertainty surrounding missing infection signs spanned surgical specialties, (2) there were perceived risks of negative consequences associated with omitting urine cultures and treatment prior to specific procedure sites and types, and additionally, (3) participants suggested potential routes for adjusting these perceived risks to facilitate de-implementation acceptance. Notably, participants suggested that leadership support and peer engagement could help improve surgeon buy-in.

Conclusions:

Concerns about perceived risks sometimes outweigh the evidence against routine preoperative urine cultures to detect ASB. Evidence from trusted peers may improve openness to de-implementing preoperative urine cultures.

Type
Original Article
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is a work of the US Government and is not subject to copyright protection within the United States. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of The Society for Healthcare Epidemiology of America.
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution and reproduction, provided the original article is properly cited.
Copyright
© Department of Government Affairs, 2024

Introduction

Multidrug resistant organisms (MDROs) cause increased morbidity and mortality in American hospitals, resulting in more than 35,000 deaths annually. 1 Over-ordering of urine cultures (UC) and subsequent overtreatment of asymptomatic bacteriuria (ASB) are major contributors to antibiotic overuse, which leads to antibiotic resistance. Reference Morgan, Malani and Diekema2,Reference Trautner3 Recent studies show that urine cultures and antibiotic treatment of ASB do not prevent postoperative infections or surgical site infections. Reference Partridge, Daly and Hemsley4,Reference Weale, El-Bakri and Saeed5 These unnecessary courses of antibiotics place patients at increased risk for antibiotic-related complications such as adverse drug reactions, Clostridioides difficile infections, and MDRO infections. Reference Berríos-Torres, Umscheid and Bratzler6Reference Spivak, Burk and Zhang8 The most recent Infectious Diseases Society of America (IDSA) Clinical Practice guideline (2019) recommends against screening for ASB in non-urological surgeries. Reference Nicolle, Gupta and Bradley9,Reference Gupta and Trautner10 Prior to this guideline, antibiotic treatment rates of detected ASB were almost 50%, Reference Gupta and Trautner10 and resistance to stopping urine cultures to detect ASB remains. Reference Luu and Albarillo11,Reference Moore, Villanueva and Stewart12 While guidelines are necessary, targeted de-implementation strategies are often needed to create change in actual clinical practice. Reference Chan, Pearson and Bennett13,Reference Hecker, Fox and Son14 Recent data have shown that the guidelines alone have not substantially decreased rates of preoperative urine culture. Reference Claeys, Weston, Pineles, Morgan and Krein15Reference Winkler, Huang and Starr17

The Dual Process Model of Cognition (DPM) has been used to better understand clinician decision-making processes. Reference Helfrich, Rose and Hartmann18 Helfrich et al.’s de-implementation model, which is based on the DPM, states that clinician decision-making is at least in part reactive to new information, which could result in rejection of new interventions if information is not viewed as coming from a familiar or reputable source, or if they feel their decision-making ability and professional authority has been curtailed. Reference Helfrich, Rose and Hartmann18 Helfrich et al. Reference Helfrich, Rose and Hartmann18 suggest unlearning through engagement with peers and substitution of new practices as potential methods to counter negative clinician reactance. Other studies identifying surgeon decision-making behavior related to perceived risk found that surgeons relied heavily on intuitive decision-making processes, Reference Pauley, Flin, Yule and Youngson19 and that those processes are driven by risk perception Reference Sacks, Dawes and Ettner20 and available surgical options. Reference Sacks, Dawes and Tsugawa21

Perceived risk is defined as the combination of uncertainty and potential severity of any related outcomes. Reference Hsieh22 Previous research has examined how clinicians assess potential risks and harms when making preoperative patient care decisions. Reference Pauley, Flin, Yule and Youngson19Reference Lotto, Seaton, Jones and Lotto25 Some of this work found that surgeons’ levels of risk aversion varied on an individual basis, Reference Pauley, Flin, Yule and Youngson19,Reference Hsieh22 and was based on perceived environmental threats as well as likelihood and severity of potential consequences. Reference Pauley, Flin, Yule and Youngson19 However, surgeons did not always have appropriate risk literacy to facilitate correct perception of risk likelihood and severity. Reference Dilaver, Gwilym, Preece, Twine and Bosanquet23,Reference Garcia-Retamero, Cokely, Wicki and Joeris24

Our study sought to gather information on what drives clinician decision-making regarding routine preoperative urine cultures. We aimed to inform future interventions to address practitioner needs and concerns when introducing new guidelines about preoperative urine cultures. We used perceived risk in the context of the DPM as a framing device to gain insight into how surgeons think about ordering urine cultures preoperatively, and we explored which perceived risks may keep them from de-implementing urine cultures for asymptomatic patients who are not undergoing genitourinary surgeries. This study was approved by the VA Central Institutional Review Board.

Methods

We conducted 33 qualitative, semi-structured interviews with 35 participants across 5 Veterans Affairs (VA) hospitals around the United States between October 2020 and April 2022 (Table 1). The research team asked surgical or infectious disease (ID) leaders if their facility was interested in this research, then asked for names of staff who were involved in preoperative urine culture processes. Potential interviewees were invited via email to confidential interviews alone or in groups. Semi-structured interview guides, tailored to participant roles, consisted of open-ended questions about a range of topics including familiarity with current ASB guidelines, current ordering practice, and the decision-making process for ordering routine preoperative urine cultures for non-urological procedures (see Supplemental Material).

Table 1. Number of participants by role

Four members of the research team developed a thematic codebook together using a combination of inductively developed codes (or topical categories) and the DPM. Reference Helfrich, Rose and Hartmann18 At least two members of the qualitative team coded each interview together using a “negotiated” or consensus coding approach. Reference Garrison, Cleveland-Innes, Koole and Kappelman26 Differences were resolved by a third team member. Two members further reviewed the data under the “Testing Decision-Making” inductive code using the concept of perceived risk Reference Pauley, Flin, Yule and Youngson19Reference Garcia-Retamero, Cokely, Wicki and Joeris24 as a sensitizing concept Reference Bowen27 to identify reasons why clinicians might be reluctant to de-implement preoperative urine cultures.

Results

We interviewed surgeons, infectious disease physicians, surgical advanced practice providers (APPs), a surgical nurse manager, infectious disease pharmacists, and others (Table 1). Participants had been in their current role for an average of 4 years, ranging from 1–20 years. We identified themes relating to surgeons’ concerns about de-implementing preoperative urine cultures to detect asymptomatic bacteriuria (ASB) in patients undergoing non-urological procedures: (1) anxiety and uncertainty surrounding missing infection signs spanned surgical specialties, (2) there were perceived risks of negative consequences associated with omitting urine cultures and treatment prior to specific procedure sites and types, and additionally, (3) participants suggested potential routes for adjusting these perceived risks to facilitate de-implementation acceptance. Examining surgeons’ risk perceptions in this way allows us to better understand surgeon rationale in continuing to order urine cultures to detect ASB, and what concerns should be considered when creating interventions to de-implement urine cultures (Figure 1).

Figure 1. Impact of ASB risk perception by surgeons on preoperative UC ordering decisions.

UC, urine cultures; ASB, asymptomatic bacteriuria.

General perceived risk of infection through neglecting to order urine cultures

Participants reported variation in patterns of ordering urine cultures. Not all participants knew about the new guidelines. Participants suggested that for some surgeons, uncertainty around perceived risk that undetected and untreated ASB may cause postoperative complications was a significant factor in choosing to order preoperative urine cultures:

So this is where the fear comes among surgeon[s], if there’s an ongoing infection and it’s not detected, it’s very likely that the patient will have a complication or a post-op infection afterwards. (General surgeon, site 1).

Similarly, a participant at another site described how testing was sometimes done to assuage the “what if” anxiety that there might be a pathogen present that could cause problems postoperatively (Nurse practitioner 2, site 4).

For some participants, patient factors contributed to clinical decision-making about ordering preoperative urine cultures. They felt they could potentially prevent postoperative complications through antibiotic treatment. They described how there was some reluctance to test only symptomatic patients because they felt that Veterans might not experience symptoms the same way as non-Veterans (Table 2). Participants worried that symptoms of infection, or lack thereof, could also be highly dependent on individual patient health and on conditions such as a spinal cord injury or catheter use. These conditions can affect infection signs, and clinicians did not want to miss infections with potentially serious consequences. However, this point of view was not necessarily universal. Not all surgeons engaged in this practice. Some were individually less inclined, while some worked at institutions that had changed their policies. A few other participants emphasized that the worries expressed by their colleagues were not supported by current empirical evidence (Table 2).

Table 2. Key themes and exemplar quotes

According to some participants, surgeons’ perceptions of risk were informed by fear of serious patient consequences. In the words of one ID physician (Site 5), “the practice is probably driven a lot by fear, and that can be hard to deal with.” Participants suggested that the strong perceived risk can make it difficult to convince surgeons to change their practices on this issue, even when there is evidence available.

Concerns related to specific surgical sites and procedures

Participants reported that surgeons’ perception of the risk of ASB becoming a serious postoperative complication were also heightened for specific surgical sites and procedures. Surgeons performing orthopedic and cardiac procedures were extremely cautious to avoid any perceived risks. An antibiotic stewardship pharmacist (Site 5) suggested that some procedures “fall through the cracks” in efforts to de-implement routine urine cultures: “orthopedic [and] cardiac comes to mind, that do urine studies despite our recommendations.” Similarly, a general surgeon at another site (Site 1) reported that cardiac and orthopedic surgeons “are extremely worried about having a baseline undetected infection that … might compromise the prosthesis and result in a long-term infection afterwards.” At one site, worry about untreated ASB leading to prosthetic joint infections had led orthopedic surgeons to order urine cultures to potentially identify ASB. An orthopedic surgeon explained the rationale for the former long-time practice of preoperative urine cultures:

…the primary reason to do all this testing …is we don’t wanna miss a true UTI [urinary tract infection] for fear of having an increased risk of infection in the hip or knee replacement that we’re going to do….[so] if that’s your concern, you should check everyone and treat a lot of people. (Orthopedic surgeon, site 5)

This surgeon described a more recent change at their site, which shifted to a system of treating only symptomatic UTIs, but this quote serves as an illustration of the perceived stakes of untreated ASB for orthopedic surgeons.

The perceived stakes were also high for surgeons performing cardiac procedures. At Site 4, a surgeon and nurse practitioner described how with regard to sternal operations, cardiovascular surgeons were particularly insistent on ordering urine cultures to detect ASB. For example, the cardiac surgeon explained:

We really have a low threshold for treating it. … we’re just extremely concerned about any sort of an infection. Any sort of a bacteremia that might be present. …the consequences of a sternal wound infection are dire. So we really basically are trying to prevent it at all cost.

The chief of surgery at the site concurred that cardiovascular surgeons there reportedly considered that complications such as aortic graft infection would be “a death sentence” and would take all measures including ordering urine cultures to detect ASBs to prevent the complications they associate with them. Other roles were overall more willing to forgo routine cultures, but not all surgeons were unwilling.

Participant-suggested avenues for adjusting perceived risk of reducing unnecessary urine cultures

To readjust this inflated perceived risk, participants provided suggestions for potential avenues of changing practice. Leadership support for reducing unnecessary urine cultures at multiple sites had helped create policy change. For example, one participant attributed the successful implementation of new policy around preoperative urine cultures to the arrival of a new chief of surgery and a new education lead, both of whom talked with and helped convince clinicians that the practice of ordering urine cultures to detect ASB was unnecessary and not evidence-based (Nurse practitioner, site 2). According to this participant, these conversations helped result in new policy where it had been stymied before.

However, at another site, a participant stated that an approach from the “top down” was possible, but not necessarily sufficient to create a lasting shift in perceived risk and unlearn practices. The surgeon suggested that surgeons may feel dictated to and resist changing their practice. Instead, the participant suggested taking a “bottom-up” approach to building support about practice change around ordering urine cultures among the surgeons involved:

...if there is some protocol which is going to be put in place…that all the surgeons involved feel like they’ve been involved in the decision making and they’re vested in optimizing those kinds of practices. (Neurosurgeon, site 4)

A similar suggestion came from a physician who was the antimicrobial stewardship champion at that same site, who suggested that ID specialists could provide education about guidelines during consults on patients.

Participants reported surgeons were generally reluctant to change preoperative urine culture practices, and suggested that it would take time and interventions on multiple levels to appropriately adjust risk perception and get them to accept new practices around urine cultures. Surgeons did not always trust evidence gathered by researchers. Endorsement from trusted colleagues was a factor in deciding whether to adhere to changing guidelines.

Surgeons, ID specialists, a hospitalist, and surgical APPs all suggested peer engagement as a potential strategy. This suggestion was made by interviewees both at sites that had implemented changes and at sites that had not implemented any changes in preoperative urine cultures. Helping surgeons unlearn their reactive practices to perceived risk can be a lengthy process according to participants, but participants also felt that support from colleagues and leadership could be a potential inroad to changing urine culture practice.

Discussion

We found that some VA surgeons perceived that not ordering a preoperative urine culture is a serious potential risk for postoperative infection even when the patient has no symptoms of UTI. For some clinicians, this perception superseded current evidence that for most surgeries, cultures for ASB is unnecessary or even detrimental. Perceived risk of negative outcomes sometimes prevented surgeons from adhering to current guidelines. This risk was perceived as higher in some specialties, such as orthopedic and cardiovascular surgery. Participants provided us with salient suggestions for potential avenues for addressing these inflated perceptions of ASB in future interventions.

In 2019, new IDSA guidelines recommended against conducting urine cultures for non-urological procedures. This non-urological context had not been addressed in previous ASB policies. Reference Nicolle, Gupta and Bradley28 Despite this new evidence-based guidance, resistance to stopping routine urine cultures remains. Reference Luu and Albarillo11,Reference Moore, Villanueva and Stewart12 Our findings support previous observations regarding reactive and perceived risk-driven surgeon decision-making, while also providing nuance on context-specific clinical judgments. Previous research found that while surgical decision-making varies on an individual basis, surgeons tend to rely on intuition, informed by perceived threats and consequences, when making clinical decisions to avoid perceived risk. Reference Pauley, Flin, Yule and Youngson19Reference Sacks, Dawes and Tsugawa21,Reference Dilaver, Gwilym, Preece, Twine and Bosanquet23Reference Lotto, Seaton, Jones and Lotto25 Our findings focus these previous observations by providing specific context to inform the development of future interventions to de-implement preoperative urine culture ordering. The culture of each surgical department and its hospital is important to understand and may act as a contextual indicator of which approaches and interventions will be most acceptable to clinicians. Additionally, physicians at VA hospitals often also practice at nearby academic hospitals, which may impact their exposure and willingness to engage with new evidence and interventions.

In general, surgeons ordered preoperative urine cultures to detect ASB to reduce uncertainty around patient risks. Reasons given for wanting to order urine cultures included perceived risks related to ASB and potential surgical site infections for many surgeries, especially for cardiac and orthopedic surgery, concerns about the possibilities of missing infections that lead to surgical site infections, and wanting to avoid what they viewed as serious potential postoperative complications for their patients. However as previous studies describe, Reference Dilaver, Gwilym, Preece, Twine and Bosanquet23,Reference Garcia-Retamero, Cokely, Wicki and Joeris24 perceptions of infection risk among many surgical specialties was not always so accurate. Surgeons in our study made decisions reacting to these perceived risks. Some sought to spare their patients what they feared would be unnecessary potential morbidity and mortality. This fear could outweigh the evidence supporting de-implementing routine urine cultures. Since the guidelines did not specifically recommend against treatment of preoperative ASB for orthopedic implants, but rather focused on an earlier step of recommending not performing a urine culture, some clinicians feel obligated to treat once ASB is detected.

Leadership support and initiatives for de-implementation of routine urine cultures at three sites helped create policy change at those facilities prior to our study. However, participants at those sites suggested that peer engagement around the evidence could also be a useful form of engagement to improve surgeon buy-in for de-implementation. Engagement was suggested by participants at both sites that had de-implemented preoperative urine cultures, and at sites that had not. That this strategy was suggested by participants in different roles at non-de-implementing sites suggests that this is a strategy to which a wide range of clinicians would be receptive. These findings support previous studies’ conclusions that leadership support and stakeholder engagement were necessary to the success of de-implementation interventions, Reference Bourgault and Upvall29Reference Sorenson, Japinga and Crook32 and that peer involvement from ID physicians could be important to facilitating de-implementation. Reference Claeys, Weston, Pineles, Morgan and Krein15

Because the data in this study is qualitative, the sample size is relatively small compared to quantitative studies, and generalizability is limited. However, the depth of our sample (and diversity of stakeholders) adds strength to the robustness of the findings and utility in moving forward with future research focused on de-implementation.

Surgeons in our study made decisions around ordering urine cultures in reaction to perceived risks about missing ASB. Concerns about these perceived risks sometimes outweighed the current IDSA guidelines. Participants suggested that leadership support and peer engagement could improve surgeon buy-in. This potential strategy of peer involvement would fit well within the non-punitive focus for program adoption that is a part of the VA’s high reliability organization initiative. Reference Veazie, Peterson and Bourne33 Future research should examine how interventions account for and address perceived risk in surgeons around de-implementing urine cultures, and what types of leadership or peer engagement could help improve acceptance of de-implementation initiatives regarding routine preoperative urine cultures.

Supplementary material

The supplementary material for this article can be found at https://doi.org/10.1017/ice.2024.85.

Acknowledgements

The contents presented herein do not represent the views of the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs or the United States Government.

Financial support

This work was funded by the US Department of Veterans Affairs Health Services Research and Development Service (grant no. IIR 18-057; PIs: KG and MLS).

KG reports consulting fees in the previous 36 months from GSK, Iterum Therapeutics, Utility Therapeutics, Spero Therapeutics, and Qiagen; and royalties from UpToDate.

BWT’s work is supported in part by the US Department of Veterans Affairs Health Services Research and Development Service (grant no. CIN 13-413) at the Center for Innovations in Quality, Effectiveness, and Safety.

Competing interests

The other authors have nothing to disclose.

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Figure 0

Table 1. Number of participants by role

Figure 1

Figure 1. Impact of ASB risk perception by surgeons on preoperative UC ordering decisions.UC, urine cultures; ASB, asymptomatic bacteriuria.

Figure 2

Table 2. Key themes and exemplar quotes

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