Philmon Carla, Smith Terri, Williamson Sharon, Goodman Edward
Department of Infectious Diseases, Pharmacy, and Laboratory, Presbyterian Hospital of Dallas, TX 75231, USA.
Infect Control Hosp Epidemiol. 2006 Mar;27(3):239-44. doi: 10.1086/500419. Epub 2006 Feb 28.
To test the hypothesis that antibiotic use could be controlled or improved in a community teaching hospital, with improvement defined as reductions in overall use, overall cost, and antimicrobial resistance.
Interventional study with historical comparison.
A not-for-profit, 900-bed community general hospital with residents in medicine, surgery, obstetrics-gynecology, and psychiatry.
Physicians who requested any of the targeted antibiotics.
Three categories of inpatient antibiotic orders were monitored beginning in April 2001: conversion from intravenous to oral administration for selected highly bioavailable antimicrobials, cessation of perioperative prophylaxis within 24 hours for patients undergoing clean and clean-contaminated surgery, and consultation with an infectious diseases physician before continuing administration of selected drugs beyond 48 hours. Data were analyzed after the first 33 months. Patient outcomes were reviewed during the hospital stay and at readmission if it occurred within 30 days after discharge.
From April 2001 through December 2003, a total of 1426 requests for antimicrobial therapy met criteria for intervention. Overall physician compliance with the program was 76%, ranging from 57% for perioperative prophylaxis to 92% for intravenous to oral conversion. Antimicrobial costs per patient-day decreased by 31%, from 13.67 US dollars in 2000 (before program implementation) to 9.41 US dollars in 2003. Total savings in acquisition costs were 1,841,203 US dollars for the 3-year period. Resistance to numerous drugs among Klebsiella pneumoniae isolates was also significantly reduced.
A program to improve the use of antibiotics in a community hospital was successful in reducing overall use, overall cost, and antimicrobial resistance.
检验在社区教学医院抗生素使用能够得到控制或改善这一假设,将改善定义为总体使用量、总成本及抗菌药物耐药性的降低。
采用历史对照的干预性研究。
一家拥有900张床位的非营利性社区综合医院,设有内科、外科、妇产科及精神科住院医师项目。
开具任何一种目标抗生素的医生。
从2001年4月开始监测三类住院抗生素医嘱:对于选定的高生物利用度抗菌药物,从静脉给药转换为口服给药;对于接受清洁及清洁-污染手术的患者,在24小时内停止围手术期预防性用药;对于选定药物连续使用超过48小时的情况,在继续用药前咨询感染病科医生。在最初的33个月后对数据进行分析。在住院期间以及出院后30天内再次入院时对患者结局进行评估。
2001年4月至2003年12月,共有1426例抗菌治疗申请符合干预标准。医生对该项目的总体依从率为76%,围手术期预防性用药的依从率为57%,静脉给药转换为口服给药的依从率为92%。每位患者每天的抗菌药物成本下降了31%,从2000年(项目实施前)的13.67美元降至2003年的9.41美元。三年期间采购成本总共节省了1,841,203美元。肺炎克雷伯菌分离株对多种药物的耐药性也显著降低。
一项旨在改善社区医院抗生素使用情况的项目成功降低了总体使用量、总成本及抗菌药物耐药性。