Housestaff focus groups and surveys to determine knowledge, attitudes,
and beliefs concerning antibiotic use at The Johns Hopkins Hospital
PI: Arjun Srinivasan, MD
Sponsor: The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)
There is widespread agreement that the growing problem of antimicrobial
resistance is an important challenge to healthcare. Data from the
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s (CDC) National
Nosocomial Infection Surveillance (NNIS) system indicate that
not only have the rates of bacterial resistance risen steadily over
the past decade but that this resistance is no longer a phenomenon
limited to the intensive care unit (ICU) setting. It has been demonstrated
that a great deal of antimicrobial use is either unnecessary or
inappropriate and that decreasing this use is effective in curtailing
resistance. These facts have prompted many to call for improvements
in antimicrobial prescribing practices and have led to the creation
of position statements and guidelines from national infectious disease
organizations. More recently, the CDC has included several measures
pertaining to improved antimicrobial use in its Campaign to Prevent
Antimicrobial Resistance in healthcare settings.
Because changes in antimicrobial prescribing patterns will necessitate
changes in physician behavior, it is important to better understand
what physicians know about antimicrobials, how they acquire and
maintain that knowledge and what factors influence their prescribing
of antimicrobials. As is the case with other campaigns targeting
physician behavior, a better understanding of these underlying factors
will permit the development of more effective interventions. Previous
surveys have been done to assess both physician knowledge about
antimicrobials and attitudes concerning antimicrobial use and
resistance. However, only the study by Wester et al. focused on physicians
who primarily care for in-patients and included housestaff
physicians, although that study focused exclusively on internal
medicine residents. No previous physician surveys on antimicrobial
use and resistance have included a direct knowledge assessment of
antimicrobial use or included housestaff physicians on services
other than internal medicine.
We surveyed housestaff physicians from five departments in our
hospital to measure their knowledge, attitudes and beliefs about
antimicrobial use and resistance and to learn more about how they
acquire and maintain their knowledge.
For more information on this study please email Ann Richards
or contact her at (443) 287-4570.
Top of Page
Back to Current Studies