9 Education and training

Antimicrobial Stewardship: A Competency-based Approach is a free course created by the WHO for clinicians that provides detailed information on appropriate treatment for specific conditions in separate short courses. It aims to address the following core competencies:

  • C1: Understands the patient and the patient’s clinical needs
  • C2: Understands treatment options and how they support the patient’s clinical needs
  • C3: Works in partnership with the patient and other healthcare professionals to develop and implement a treatment plan
  • C4: Communicates the treatment plan and its rationale clearly to the patient and other health professionals
  • C5: Monitors and reviews the patient’s response to treatment
(WHO, n.d. 3)

The courses in the WHO course are specific to different types of infection. If you are a clinician, you may find some of these useful to develop your knowledge of AMS further.

Activity 9: An example of an AMS

Timing: Allow about 15 minutes

Make notes as you watch Videos 6 and 7, and then answer the questions below.

Watch the following interview video on an example from Nigeria.

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Video 6 An example of stewardship from Nigeria (FutureLearn, n.d. 4).
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Video 7 A pharmacy perspective (FutureLearn, n.d. 4).
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  1. How did the AMS team assess the situation at the beginning of Video 6?
  2. What challenges did they have in developing an antimicrobial guideline and how did they address them?
  3. In Video 7, what challenges did Mrs Opanuga identify?
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Discussion

  1. The AMS team assessed the situation with a PPS, which they communicated to all relevant staff.
  2. There was no antibiogram, so the initial guideline was based on guidelines from other countries, adapted using local knowledge. Additionally, when individuals were asked to give feedback, the response was poor. The request was sent to units, and better feedback was obtained.
  3. You may have recalled that she mentioned:
    • a lack of manpower
    • new drugs not being added to the formulary
    • late reviews of medication
    • lost forms or incomplete documentation
    • patients starting their medication late due to errors or poor communication between clinicians and the pharmacy.

Activity 10: Reflecting on using an AMS

Timing: Allow about 15 minutes

Now that you have completed the course, can you identify any simple ways that AMS could be improved at your own healthcare facility? Can you think of any changes you might make in your own practice?

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Discussion

At the hospital level, you may have thought of better communication of relevant data (such as up-to-date hospital antibiograms) and better training (such as continuous in-service training to keep all professionals up to date on appropriate choice, doses and timing of antimicrobials).

In your own practice you might have thought of timely switching from IV to oral administration. You may also have decided to study WHO resources relevant to your prescribing practice, such as selected topics from Antimicrobial Stewardship: A Competency-based Approach (WHO, n.d. 3).

8 Processes for improvement

10 End-of-course quiz