Novel application of a discrete choice experiment to identify preferences for a national healthcare-associated infection surveillance programme: a cross-sectional study
Version 2 2024-06-04, 09:37Version 2 2024-06-04, 09:37
Version 1 2016-11-25, 15:52Version 1 2016-11-25, 15:52
journal contribution
posted on 2024-06-04, 09:37authored byPL Russo, G Chen, AC Cheng, M Richards, N Graves, J Ratcliffe, L Hall
Objective: To identify key stakeholder preferences and
priorities when considering a national healthcareassociated
infection (HAI) surveillance programme
through the use of a discrete choice experiment (DCE).
Setting: Australia does not have a national HAI
surveillance programme. An online web-based DCE was
developed and made available to participants in Australia.
Participants: A sample of 184 purposively selected
healthcare workers based on their senior leadership
role in infection prevention in Australia.
Primary and secondary outcomes: A DCE
requiring respondents to select 1 HAI surveillance
programme over another based on 5 different
characteristics (or attributes) in repeated hypothetical
scenarios. Data were analysed using a mixed logit
model to evaluate preferences and identify the relative
importance of each attribute.
Results: A total of 122 participants completed the
survey (response rate 66%) over a 5-week period.
Excluding 22 who mismatched a duplicate choice
scenario, analysis was conducted on 100 responses.
The key findings included: 72% of stakeholders
exhibited a preference for a surveillance programme
with continuous mandatory core components (mean
coefficient 0.640 ( p<0.01)), 65% for a standard
surveillance protocol where patient-level data are
collected on infected and non-infected patients (mean
coefficient 0.641 ( p<0.01)), and 92% for hospital-level
data that are publicly reported on a website and not
associated with financial penalties (mean coefficient
1.663 ( p<0.01)).
Conclusions: The use of the DCE has provided a
unique insight to key stakeholder priorities when
considering a national HAI surveillance programme.
The application of a DCE offers a meaningful method
to explore and quantify preferences in this setting.
History
Journal
BMJ open
Volume
6
Article number
e011397
Pagination
1-8
Location
London, Eng.
Open access
Yes
ISSN
2044-6055
eISSN
2044-6055
Language
eng
Publication classification
C Journal article, C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal