Candidate: Dr. Felicia Skelton completed medical school at Baylor College of Medicine (BCM), residency in rehabilitation medicine at the University of Washington, serving as chief resident, and clinical fellowship in spinal cord injury (SCI) medicine at BCM. She is a current health services R&D (HSR&D) post-doctoral fellow at the Center for Innovations in Quality, Effectiveness and Safety (IQuESt) at the Michael E. DeBakey VA Medical Center (MEDVAMC) in Houston, TX. She has four first-authored publications, one submitted manuscript and two pending manuscripts. She is dedicated to a career as a clinician scientist, and as a Black female, an ideal candidate for the Historically Black College or University (HBCU) Research Scientist Training Program. Career Development and Goals: During this award period Dr. Skelton will obtain the necessary epidemiologic, qualitative methods, database analysis and implementation science skills to become an independently-funded clinician scientist exploring optimal health care delivery and outcomes for Veterans with SCI. This will be achieved through completion of coursework leading to a masters in clinical investigation from BCM, as well as other targeted educational opportunities developed by her diverse group of mentors and advisors. Environment: IQuESt and MEDVAMC are the ideal settings to complete this research, as the premiere HSR center in the Southwest and the one of the largest SCI centers in the nation, serving over 450 Veterans in the outpatient setting annually, respectively. Dr. Skelton has the support of clinical, research, administrative and patient advocacy leadership both locally and nationally for this project. Research: Bacteriuria, ether asymptomatic (ASB) or symptomatic urinary tract infection (UTI) is common in persons SCI. Current Veterans Health Administration (VHA) guidelines recommend a screening urine culture for every Veteran with SCI during their annual evaluation, even when symptomatic, which is contrary to other national guidelines. Our preliminary data suggest that a positive urine culture (even without signs or symptoms of infection) drives antibiotic use. As the clinical outcomes of the annual exam testing have not been explored, we theorize some Veterans are receiving antibiotics unnecessarily. The negative consequences of antibiotic overuse and antibiotic resistance are well documented, and have a national and even global focus. This study will develop an intervention aimed to educate stakeholders on evidence-based management of ASB and UTI, and guide antibiotic stewardship in this high-risk population.
Aim 1 will identify patient, provider, and facility factors driving bacteriuria testing and subsequent antibiotic use after the SCI annual evaluation using qualitative interviews and quantitative surveys.
Aim 2 will use national VHA databases to identify the predictors of urine testing and subsequent antibiotic use during the annual examination, and compare the clinical outcomes of those who received antibiotics to those who did not.
Aim 3 will use the information gathered from the previous aims to develop the ?Test Smart, Treat Smart? intervention, a combination of patient and provider education and resources that will help all stakeholders have informed conversations about urine testing and antibiotic use; feasibility will be tested at a single site. The next step wil be to refine the intervention and test its feasibility and effectiveness at multiple sites, with VA merit review funding, as well as guiding policy reform surrounding this common, but burdensome condition.

Public Health Relevance

After a spinal cord injury (SCI), changes in how the body stores and eliminates urine often leads to bacteria growing in the bladder. If a Veteran with SCI has signs and symptoms of a urinary tract infection (UTI), their urine should be tested for these bacteria, and if bacteria are found, treated with antibiotics appropriately. If they do not have signs and symptoms of an UTI however, several treatment guidelines recommend that the urine should not be tested in the first place. Furthermore, antibiotics should not be given. Antibiotics can harm as well as help, and Veterans with SCI are very likely to receive many courses of antibiotics over their lifetime. Our study will develop a program to help providers prescribe Veterans antibiotics for bacteria in the urine only when necessary, and to educate Veterans with SCI about best practices around urine testing and antibiotic use.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
Veterans Affairs (VA)
Type
Veterans Administration (IK2)
Project #
5IK2HX002484-03
Application #
9873901
Study Section
VA-ORD Historically Black College and University Research Scientist Training Program (HBCU)
Project Start
2017-11-01
Project End
2022-10-31
Budget Start
2019-11-01
Budget End
2020-10-31
Support Year
3
Fiscal Year
2020
Total Cost
Indirect Cost
Name
Michael E Debakey VA Medical Center
Department
Type
DUNS #
078446044
City
Houston
State
TX
Country
United States
Zip Code
77030
Skelton, Felicia; Grigoryan, Larissa; Holmes, Sally Ann et al. (2018) Routine Urine Testing at the Spinal Cord Injury Annual Evaluation Leads to Unnecessary Antibiotic Use: A Pilot Study and Future Directions. Arch Phys Med Rehabil 99:219-225
Skelton, Felicia; Suda, Katie; Evans, Charlesnika et al. (2018) Effective antibiotic stewardship in spinal cord injury: Challenges and a way forward. J Spinal Cord Med :1-4