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Item 765. Development of an Adaptable Roadmap for Implementation of the Infectious Diseases Society of America Core Antimicrobial Stewardship Curriculum in Infectious Diseases Fellowship Programs(Oxford University Press, 2023-11-27) Hojat, Leila S.; Patel, Payal K.; Nori, Priya; Hamilton, Keith W.; Justo, Julie Ann; Spicer, Jennifer O.; Logan, Ashleigh; Bennani, Kenza; Lee, Matthew S.; Bryson-Cahn, Chloe; Stohs, Erica J.; Willis, Zachary; Moenster, Ryan P.; Van Schooneveld, Trevor C.; Brennan-Krohn, Thea; Beeler, Cole; Kang, Amy Y.; Al Lawani, Hawra; Cherabuddi, Kartik; Fong, Gary; Ince, Dilek; Holubar, Marisa; Paras, Molly L.; Gaston, David; Shnekendorf, Rachel A.; Williams, Rostam; Luther, Vera; Medicine, School of MedicineBackground: The Infectious Diseases Society of America (IDSA) developed and disseminated a Core Antimicrobial Stewardship (AS) Curriculum intended to formalize AS training in infectious diseases (ID) fellowship programs in 2018. This study identified individual program approaches to curriculum implementation and intended to use this information to develop an implementation guide tailored to specific program needs. Methods: We distributed surveys to all fellowship program directors (PDs) who had previously implemented the Core AS Curriculum. Questions were designed to identify ID program structure, curriculum participants, curriculum sections and materials utilized, and resources and barriers to implementation. Both structured and qualitative responses were captured. The results were summarized descriptively and organized into a framework connecting barriers to proposed solutions. Results: PDs from 34 unique programs who had administered the Core Curriculum to an estimated 405 ID fellows responded to the survey, out of the 159 institutions invited (21.4%). Most represented adult programs which had administered the curriculum for at least 2 years (Table 1). Additional learners often included ID faculty and pharmacy trainees, and teachers were mostly AS program leadership. Most PDs reported limited faculty time as a barrier to implementation, whereas dedicated AS curricular time was a resource available to most programs (Figure 1). Approaches to curriculum implementation based on survey responses relating to each fellowship program feature were suggested, some of which applied to multiple program features (Figure 2). Qualitative feedback was generally positive, and most PDs indicated that they intended to continue to implement the curriculum. Additional materials such as a facilitator guide and demonstrations were proposed as other components which could assist with curriculum implementation. Roadmap with infectious diseases fellowship program features (rounded green boxes) connected to identified potential approaches to curriculum implementation (rectangular blue boxes). Program features are categorized as relating to conference structure, program resources, or program barriers. Suggested approaches with potential application to multiple program features are highlighted in orange. Conclusion: The IDSA Core AS curriculum provides an effective means of formalizing basic AS education into ID fellowship training. Curriculum implementation can be optimized by tailoring to training program resources and unique features. An implementation roadmap may be a useful tool to assist ID fellowship PDs with this task.