Knox Matthew C, Edye Michael
1 School of Medicine, Western Sydney University , Campbelltown, New South Wales, Australia .
2 Department of Surgery, Blacktown Hospital , Blacktown, New South Wales, Australia .
Surg Infect (Larchmt). 2016 Apr;17(2):224-8. doi: 10.1089/sur.2015.194. Epub 2015 Dec 31.
High rates of inappropriate use of prophylactic antibiotics in surgery continue to be reported in the literature, with many institutions designing interventions aimed at improving prescription. This study evaluates the surgical arm of a clinician-focused educational antimicrobial stewardship program implemented in February 2014 at Blacktown Hospital, Australia.
A before-after analysis of the surgical antibiotic prophylaxis intervention was conducted at Blacktown Hospital, New South Wales, Australia. Two hundred abdominal general surgical patients were selected via simple random sampling and categorized into pre-intervention (n = 100) and post-intervention (n = 100) groups. Antibiotic prophylaxis regimens were compared with the Australian guideline, Therapeutic Guidelines: Antibiotic (v14) with respect to drug choice, dosage, timing of administration, and duration of administration.
Overall adherence rates in the pre- and post-intervention periods were 18% and 15% respectively, demonstrating no substantial change (p = 0.568). No patients in either group were administered antibiotics without an appropriate indication. There were no substantial decreases in error rates across any category, including drug choice, dosage, timing of administration, duration of administration, or re-dosing. The apparent decrease in the rate of inappropriate broad-spectrum cephalosporin usage was not statistically significant (29.3% vs. 18.8%; p = 0.16).
The educational intervention studied demonstrated no substantial change to overall adherence. Given the frequent failure of such interventions, stronger and more directly mandated adoption of prescribing guidelines is recommended for surgical services. Future consideration should be given to focused computer-based solutions, integrated with electronic medical records where possible.
文献中持续报道手术中预防性抗生素使用不当的比例较高,许多机构设计了旨在改善处方的干预措施。本研究评估了2014年2月在澳大利亚布莱克敦医院实施的以临床医生为重点的教育性抗菌药物管理计划的手术部分。
在澳大利亚新南威尔士州的布莱克敦医院对手术抗生素预防干预措施进行了前后分析。通过简单随机抽样选择了200例腹部普通外科患者,并分为干预前组(n = 100)和干预后组(n = 100)。将抗生素预防方案与澳大利亚指南《治疗指南:抗生素》(第14版)在药物选择、剂量、给药时间和给药持续时间方面进行比较。
干预前和干预后的总体依从率分别为18%和15%,无显著变化(p = 0.568)。两组中均无患者在无适当指征的情况下使用抗生素。包括药物选择、剂量、给药时间、给药持续时间或重新给药在内的任何类别中的错误率均无显著下降。不适当使用广谱头孢菌素的比例明显下降,但无统计学意义(29.3%对18.8%;p = 0.16)。
所研究的教育干预措施未显示总体依从性有显著变化。鉴于此类干预措施经常失败,建议手术科室更有力、更直接地强制采用处方指南。未来应考虑采用针对性的基于计算机的解决方案,并尽可能与电子病历集成。