Litcius/Paper detail

Harnessing the wisdom of crowds can improve guideline compliance of antibiotic prescribers and support antimicrobial stewardship

Eva M. Krockow, Ralf H. J. M. Kurvers, Stefan M. Herzog, Juliane E. Kämmer, Ryan Hamilton, Nathalie Thilly, G. Macheda, Céline Pulcini

2020Scientific Reports18 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Antibiotic overprescribing is a global challenge contributing to rising levels of antibiotic resistance and mortality. We test a novel approach to antibiotic stewardship. Capitalising on the concept of "wisdom of crowds", which states that a group's collective judgement often outperforms the average individual, we test whether pooling treatment durations recommended by different prescribers can improve antibiotic prescribing. Using international survey data from 787 expert antibiotic prescribers, we run computer simulations to test the performance of the wisdom of crowds by comparing three data aggregation rules across different clinical cases and group sizes. We also identify patterns of prescribing bias in recommendations about antibiotic treatment durations to quantify current levels of overprescribing. Our results suggest that pooling the treatment recommendations (using the median) could improve guideline compliance in groups of three or more prescribers. Implications for antibiotic stewardship and the general improvement of medical decision making are discussed. Clinical applicability is likely to be greatest in the context of hospital ward rounds and larger, multidisciplinary team meetings, where complex patient cases are discussed and existing guidelines provide limited guidance.

Topics & Concepts

Antimicrobial stewardshipGuidelineContext (archaeology)PoolingMedicineMultidisciplinary approachTest (biology)Antibiotic StewardshipStewardship (theology)Antibiotic resistanceIntensive care medicineFamily medicineAntibioticsComputer sciencePolitical scienceArtificial intelligenceGeographyLawPathologyPoliticsBiologyMicrobiologyArchaeologyPaleontologyAntibiotic Use and ResistancePatient Satisfaction in HealthcareHealthcare Systems and Technology