Opportunities for nurse involvement in surgical antimicrobial stewardship strategies: A qualitative study

Courtney Ierano, Arjun Rajkhowa, Fiona Gotterson, Caroline Marshall, Trisha Peel, Darshini Ayton, Karin Thursky

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleResearchpeer-review

6 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Background: Multi-disciplinary antimicrobial stewardship teams are a common strategy employed to optimise antimicrobial prescribing. Nurses play a pivotal role in patient care and safety; however, their role and potential opportunities across surgical antimicrobial stewardship are not well-established. This study aims to highlight health professional perspectives of the nurse's role and relevant opportunities for nurses to engage in and lead surgical antimicrobial stewardship initiatives. Methods: An exploratory, multi-site, collective qualitative case study. Transcribed audio-recordings of focus groups with health professionals underwent thematic analysis, with mapping to established frameworks. Results: Four key themes were identified; surgical antimicrobial prophylaxis is not prioritised for quality improvement, but nurses perceive benefits from surgical antimicrobial prophylaxis education and training; professional hierarchy hinders nurse engagement and leadership in antimicrobial stewardship; nurses are consistently engaged with patient care throughout the surgical journey; and clarity of roles and accountability for surgical antimicrobial prophylaxis review and follow-up can bolster quality improvement initiatives. Discussion: Many opportunities exist for nurse engagement in surgical antimicrobial stewardship. Identification of barriers and enablers support theoretically informed strategies i.e., education and guideline accessibility; multidisciplinary collaborations; executive support for nursing capacity building and the standardisation of surgical antimicrobial prophylaxis workflow and documentation. Conclusions: Nurses are critical to patient safety and to supporting antimicrobial stewardship, in the operating theatre, and throughout the patient's surgical journey. Applying theoretical frameworks to understand barriers and enablers to nurses’ contribution to antimicrobial stewardship has given insights to inform interventions to support nurse engagement. Tweetable abstract: Nurses are critical for patient safety. Many opportunities exist to support them as surgical antimicrobial stewards.

Original languageEnglish
Article number104186
Number of pages11
JournalInternational Journal of Nursing Studies
Volume128
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Apr 2022

Keywords

  • Antimicrobial stewardship
  • Behaviour change
  • Decision-making
  • Infection prevention
  • Nursing
  • Peri-operative
  • Surgical antimicrobial prophylaxis
  • Surgical antimicrobial stewardship

Cite this