Barlam Tamar F, Morgan Jake R, Wetzler Lee M, Christiansen Cindy L, Drainoni Mari-Lynn
1Section of Infectious Diseases,Department of Medicine,Boston University School of Medicine,Boston,MA,USA.
2Department of Health Policy and Management,Boston University School of Public Health,Boston,MA,USA.
Infect Control Hosp Epidemiol. 2015 Feb;36(2):153-9. doi: 10.1017/ice.2014.21.
To examine inappropriate antibiotic prescribing for acute respiratory tract infections (RTIs) in ambulatory care to help target antimicrobial stewardship interventions. Design and Setting Retrospective analysis of RTI visits within general internal medicine (GIM) and family medicine (FM) ambulatory practices at an inner-city academic medical center from 2008 to 2010.
Patient, physician, and practice characteristics were analyzed using multivariable logistic regression to determine factors predictive of inappropriate prescribing; physicians in the highest and lowest antibiotic-prescribing quartiles were compared using χ2 analysis.
Visits with FM providers, female gender, and self-reported race/ethnicity as white or Hispanic were significantly associated with inappropriate antibiotic prescribing. Physicians in the lowest quartile prescribed antibiotics for 5%-28% (mean, 21%) of RTI visits; physicians in the highest quartile prescribed antibiotics for 54%-85% (mean, 65%) of RTI visits. High prescribers had fewer African-American patients and more patients who were younger and privately insured. High prescribers had more patients with chronic lung disease. A GIM practice pod with a low prescriber was 3.0 times more likely to have a second low prescriber than other practice pods, whereas pods with a high prescriber were 1.3 times more likely to have a second high prescriber.
Medical specialty was the only physician factor predictive of inappropriate prescribing when patient gender, race, and comorbidities were taken into account. Possible disparities in care need further study. Stewardship education in medical school, enlisting low prescribers as physician leaders, and targeting interventions to the highest prescribers might be more effective approaches to antimicrobial stewardship.
检查门诊医疗中急性呼吸道感染(RTIs)的不恰当抗生素处方情况,以帮助确定抗菌药物管理干预措施的目标。设计与背景对2008年至2010年在市中心学术医疗中心的普通内科(GIM)和家庭医学(FM)门诊就诊的RTIs患者进行回顾性分析。
使用多变量逻辑回归分析患者、医生和医疗实践特征,以确定预测不恰当处方的因素;使用χ2分析比较抗生素处方量最高和最低四分位数的医生。
由FM提供者诊治、女性以及自我报告种族/族裔为白人或西班牙裔的就诊与不恰当抗生素处方显著相关。抗生素处方量最低四分位数的医生为5%-28%(平均21%)的RTIs就诊患者开具了抗生素;抗生素处方量最高四分位数的医生为54%-85%(平均65%)的RTIs就诊患者开具了抗生素。高处方量医生的非裔美国患者较少,年轻患者和私人保险患者较多。高处方量医生的慢性肺病患者较多。一个有低处方量医生的GIM医疗小组出现第二个低处方量医生的可能性是其他医疗小组的3.0倍,而有高处方量医生的小组出现第二个高处方量医生的可能性是其他小组的1.3倍。
在考虑患者性别、种族和合并症时,医学专科是预测不恰当处方的唯一医生因素。护理方面可能存在的差异需要进一步研究。在医学院开展管理教育、招募低处方量医生担任医生领导者以及针对高处方量医生进行干预可能是更有效的抗菌药物管理方法。