Bond C A Cab, Raehl Cynthia L
Department of Pharmacy Practice, School of Pharmacy, Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center-Amarillo, 79106, USA.
Am J Health Syst Pharm. 2007 Sep 15;64(18):1935-42. doi: 10.2146/ajhp060631.
The associations between pharmacist-managed antimicrobial prophylaxis in Medicare patients who had surgical codes indicative of the need for antimicrobial prophylaxis and the major health care outcomes of death rate, length of stay, Medicare charges, drug charges, laboratory charges, and complications were explored.
Pharmacist management of antimicrobial prophylaxis was evaluated in 242,704 Medicare patients from 860 [corrected] hospitals.
Patients who developed a surgical-site infection (SSI) had a 331.58% increased risk of death compared with patients who did not develop an SSI (chi2 = 743.471; df = 1; p < 0.0001; odds ratio [OR], 3.62; 95% confidence interval [CI], 3.28-3.99). Patients who developed an SSI also had a 167.16% increase in length of stay, 136.49% increase in total Medicare charges, 245.96% increase in drug charges, and 187.14% increase in laboratory charges. In hospitals without pharmacist-managed antimicrobial prophylaxis, death rates were 52.06% higher (105 excess deaths; p < 0.0001; OR, 1.54; 95% CI, 1.46-1.63), length of stay was 10.21% higher (167,941 excess patient days, p < 0.0001), mean +/- S.D. total Medicare charges were 3.10% higher ($980 +/- $1,109 more per patient) ($182,113,400 excess total Medicare charges, p < 0.0001), mean +/- S.D. drug charges were 7.24% higher ($292 +/- $492 more per patient) ($54,262,360 excess drug charges, p = 0.005), mean +/- S.D. laboratory charges were 2.72% higher ($74 +/- $151 more per patient) ($13,751,420 excess laboratory charges, p = 0.0056), and SSIs were 34.30% higher (chi2 = 95.48; df = 1; p < 0.0001; OR, 1.52; 95% CI, 1.40-1.66).
The provision of pharmacist-managed antimicrobial prophylaxis was associated with significant improvement in clinical and economic outcomes for Medicare patients with a surgical code indicative of the need for antimicrobial prophylaxis.
探讨药师管理的抗菌药物预防措施与医疗保险患者主要医疗保健结局之间的关联,这些患者具有表明需要抗菌药物预防的手术编码,主要医疗保健结局包括死亡率、住院时间、医疗保险费用、药品费用、实验室检查费用及并发症。
对来自860家医院的242,704名医疗保险患者的抗菌药物预防措施的药师管理情况进行评估。
发生手术部位感染(SSI)的患者与未发生SSI的患者相比,死亡风险增加331.58%(卡方检验=743.471;自由度=1;p<0.0001;优势比[OR],3.62;95%置信区间[CI],3.28 - 3.99)。发生SSI的患者住院时间增加167.16%,医疗保险总费用增加136.49%,药品费用增加245.96%,实验室检查费用增加187.14%。在没有药师管理抗菌药物预防措施的医院中,死亡率高52.06%(多105例死亡;p<0.0001;OR,1.54;95%CI,1.46 - 1.63),住院时间长10.21%(多167,941个患者住院日,p<0.0001),医疗保险平均总费用高3.10%(每位患者多980±1,109美元)(医疗保险总费用多182,113,400美元,p<0.0001),药品平均费用高7.24%(每位患者多292±492美元)(药品费用多54,262,360美元,p = 0.005),实验室检查平均费用高2.72%(每位患者多74±151美元)(实验室检查费用多13,751,420美元,p = 0.0056),SSI发生率高34.30%(卡方检验=95.48;自由度=1;p<0.0001;OR,1.52;95%CI,1.40 - 1.66)。
对于具有表明需要抗菌药物预防手术编码的医疗保险患者,提供药师管理的抗菌药物预防措施与临床和经济结局的显著改善相关。