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Effectiveness and Implementation of a National Guideline for Acute Respiratory Tract Infections to Reduce Antibiotic Prescribing in Swiss Primary Care (ImpProGUIDE)

U

University Center for Primary Care and Public Health (Unisanté)

Status

Enrolling

Conditions

Acute Respiratory Infection
Influenza-like Illness

Treatments

Behavioral: Training Session on acute respiratory infection guideline within a multifaceted implementation strategy

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT07396428
Req-2024-00897
212429 (Other Grant/Funding Number)

Details and patient eligibility

About

The ImpProGUIDE study aims to find out whether implementing new Swiss national guidelines for acute respiratory infections (ARI) can help to reduce antibiotic prescribing in primary care. In Switzerland, most antibiotics are prescribed in outpatient care, and many of these prescriptions may not be needed - especially when infections are caused by viruses, which antibiotics do not treat. Reducing overuse of antibiotics is important to slow the spread of antibiotic resistance.

The new guidelines were developed by the Swiss Society for Infectious Diseases (SSI) to support family doctors in managing ARIs, based on a syndromic approach. They recommend the targeted use of point-of-care C-reactive protein (CRP) testing when bacterial infection is suspected, as well as shared decision-making with patients.

This study will be carried out in quality circles (QCs) - small groups of family doctors who meet regularly to discuss and improve clinical practice - and in walk-in clinics in French- and Italian-speaking regions of Switzerland. Each will be randomly assigned to either an "intervention" group or a "control" group.

In the intervention group, QC moderators and medical center directors will receive implementation resources to lead a session and distribute materials to their group in autumn 2025 on the new guidelines. Doctors can then decide whether or not to use the recommendations in their consultations.

In the control group, QCs and centers will continue their regular activities. They will receive access to the same educational materials later, in summer 2026.

Throughout the study, the researchers will collect de-identified data from health insurance billing records to track antibiotic prescribing and the use of diagnostic tests. Doctors and QC moderators will also be invited to complete short online surveys twice a year (10-15 minutes) and may be asked to join optional interviews or group discussions after the winter season.

The study will also explore the effectiveness of the implementation strategies on the adoption of the SSI guidelines, as well as the barriers and facilitators to adoption. This study type is known as a hybrid effectiveness implementation study, simultaneously evaluating an intervention's impact on antibiotic prescribing and the strategies used to implement the new national guidelines in a real-world setting.

Participation in the study is voluntary. Doctors can withdraw at any time. All data will be handled confidentially and in line with Swiss data protection laws.

The study is funded by the Swiss National Science Foundation. No support is received from pharmaceutical companies or manufacturers of diagnostic tests.

Enrollment

200 estimated patients

Sex

All

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion and exclusion criteria

Inclusion criteria for quality circles (QCs)

  • Willing to participate in a study mainly conducted in French
  • Agreeing to participate in evaluation surveys

Exclusion criteria for QCs*

- Not having any physician included in the study

Inclusion criteria for walk-in clinics

  • The clinic offers general practice/primary care medicine consultations, including emergencies
  • The clinic includes at least five physicians
  • The clinic has an "Admission to practice charged to Swiss compulsory health insurance"
  • The clinic plans to still be active in April 2026
  • Located in one of the following cantons: Vaud, Geneva, Valais, Fribourg, Jura, Neuchatel, Bern, Ticino.
  • Serving mainly adult patients
  • Willing to participate in the study

Physicians in QCs fulfilling all of the following inclusion criteria are eligible for the study:

  • Registered primary care physicians
  • Specialist title in general internal medicine or practicing physician.
  • Practicing in one of the following cantons: Vaud, Geneva, Valais, Fribourg, Jura, Neuchatel, Bern, Ticino.
  • Participating in a QC or working in an outpatient clinic participating in the study*.
  • Willing to participate in a study mainly conducted in French.
  • Agreeing to participate in evaluation surveys and agreeing to be invited to interviews

Eligibility criteria for physicians in clinics :

- Having a clinical activity as primary care physician or supervising clinical activity of physicians in post-graduate training within a clinic included in the study

The only exclusion criterion for physicians is planning to retire before April 2026.

*Note: not all physicians from a QC or a clinic are expected or required to participate individually in the study, but at least one should participate.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Diagnostic

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Single Blind

200 participants in 2 patient groups

Acute respiratory infection guideline implementation
Experimental group
Description:
Quality circles (QC) and walk-in clinics randomized to the intervention arm will receive an overarching multifaceted implementation strategy for the new acute respiratory infection (ARI) guidelines. This includes educational materials to help the QC moderators or the person responsible for education in the clinic to lead a thematic session in autumn 2025, focusing on the use of a syndromic approach, targeted C-reactive protein (CRP) testing when bacterial infection is suspected, and shared decision-making with patients. Other facets include an information sheet and pocket card for physicians, and patient leaflets on acute cough.
Treatment:
Behavioral: Training Session on acute respiratory infection guideline within a multifaceted implementation strategy
Usual care
No Intervention group
Description:
QCs and walk-in clinics randomized to the control arm will continue their routine activities without receiving the educational materials on the new guidelines during the initial phase. In the summer 2026, these groups will be offered the same training materials provided to the intervention arm, with the option to use them in their QC sessions or internal training.

Trial contacts and locations

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Central trial contact

Jelena Dunaiceva, MPH

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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