1. The use of theory in the development and evaluation of behaviour change interventions to improve antimicrobial prescribing: a systematic review.
- Author
-
Talkhan, Hend, Stewart, Derek, Mcintosh, Trudi, Ziglam, Hisham, Abdulrouf, Palli Valappila, Al-Hail, Moza, Diab, Mohammad, and Cunningham, Scott
- Subjects
- *
RESEARCH , *RESEARCH methodology , *SYSTEMATIC reviews , *MEDICAL care , *ANTI-infective agents , *MEDICAL cooperation , *EVALUATION research , *COMPARATIVE studies - Abstract
Objectives: This systematic review (SR) reviews the evidence on use of theory in developing and evaluating behaviour change interventions (BCIs) to improve clinicians' antimicrobial prescribing (AP).Methods: The SR protocol was registered with PROSPERO. Eleven databases were searched from inception to October 2018 for peer-reviewed, English-language, primary literature in any healthcare setting and for any medical condition. This included research on changing behavioural intentions (e.g. in simulated scenarios) and research measuring actual AP. All study designs/methodologies were included. Excluded were: grey literature and/or those which did not state a theory. Two reviewers independently extracted and quality assessed the data. The Theory Coding Scheme (TCS) evaluated the extent of the use of theory.Results: Searches found 4227 potentially relevant papers after removal of duplicates. Screening of titles/abstracts led to dual assessment of 38 full-text papers. Ten (five quantitative, three qualitative and two mixed-methods) met the inclusion criteria. Studies were conducted in the UK (n = 8), Canada (n = 1) and Sweden (n = 1), most in primary care settings (n = 9), targeting respiratory tract infections (n = 8), and medical doctors (n = 10). The most common theories used were Theory of Planned Behaviour (n = 7), Social Cognitive Theory (n = 5) and Operant Learning Theory (n = 5). The use of theory to inform the design and choice of intervention varied, with no optimal use as recommended in the TCS.Conclusions: This SR is the first to investigate theoretically based BCIs around AP. Few studies were identified; most were suboptimal in theory use. There is a need to consider how theory is used and reported and the systematic use of the TCS could help. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF