Factors Influencing the Implementation of Antimicrobial Stewardship in Primary Care: A Narrative Review

Antibiotics (Basel). 2022 Dec 24;12(1):30. doi: 10.3390/antibiotics12010030.

Abstract

Antimicrobial resistance (AMR) is directly driven by inappropriate use of antibiotics. Although the majority of antibiotics (an estimated 80%) are consumed in primary care settings, antimicrobial stewardship (AMS) activities in primary care remain underdeveloped and factors influencing their implementation are poorly understood. This can result in promising stewardship activities having little-to-no real-world impact. With this narrative review, we aim to identify and summarize peer-reviewed literature reporting on (1) the nature and impact of AMS interventions in primary care and (2) the individual and contextual factors influencing their implementation. Reported activities included AMS at different contextual levels (individual, collective and policy). AMS activities being often combined, it is difficult to evaluate them as stand-alone interventions. While some important individual and contextual factors were reported (difficulty to reach physicians leading to a low uptake of interventions, tight workflow of physicians requiring implementation of flexible and brief interventions and AMS as a unique opportunity to strengthen physician-patients relationship), this review identified a paucity of information in the literature about the factors that support or hinder implementation of AMS in primary care settings. In conclusion, identifying multilevel barriers and facilitators for AMS uptake is an essential step to explore before implementing primary care AMS interventions.

Keywords: antimicrobial resistance; antimicrobial stewardship; primary care; qualitative.

Publication types

  • Review

Grants and funding

This work was partly funded by the knowledge transfer activities of the National Funding Program 72 of the Swiss National Science Foundation, and is related to project grant 212429a 8 (to Y.M., L.C.C., C.P.-S., N.B.B.), the Eureka Eurostars grant [grant number E!113595 to N.B.B.] and the Leenaards Foundation academic award to N.B.B.