Department of Pharmacy, Barwon Health, PO BOX 281, Geelong, Victoria, 3220, Australia.
Department of Infectious Disease, Barwon Health, Geelong, Victoria, Australia.
BMC Infect Dis. 2020 Aug 7;20(1):586. doi: 10.1186/s12879-020-05309-8.
Inappropriate and excessive antimicrobial prescribing can lead to antimicrobial resistance. Antimicrobial Stewardship (AMS) principles are not well established in general practice in Australia despite the relatively high rate of community antimicrobial prescribing. Few interventions have been implemented that have resulted in a significant reduction or improvement in antimicrobial prescribing by General Practitioners (GPs). This study was therefore conducted to assess the impact of a novel GP educational intervention on the appropriateness of antimicrobial prescriptions as well as GP compliance with antimicrobial prescription guidelines.
In 2018, a simple GP educational intervention was rolled out in a large clinic with the aim of improving antimicrobial prescribing. It included face-to-face education sessions with GPs on AMS principles, antimicrobial resistance, current prescribing guidelines and microbiological testing. An antibiotic appropriateness audit on prescribing practice before and after the educational intervention was conducted. Data were summarised using percentages and compared across time points using Chi-squared tests and Poisson regression (results reported as risk ratios (RR) with 95% confidence intervals (CI)).
Data from 376 and 369 prescriptions in July 2016 and July 2018, respectively, were extracted. There were significant improvements in appropriate antimicrobial selection (73.9% vs 92.8%, RR = 1.26; 95% CI = 1.18-1.34), appropriate duration (53.1% vs 87.7%, RR = 1.65; 95% CI = 1.49-1.83) and compliance with guidelines (42.2% vs 58.5%, RR = 1.39, 95% CI = 1.19-1.61) post- intervention. Documentation of antimicrobial duration directions, patient follow-up as well as patient weight significantly increased after the intervention (p < 0.001). There was significant reduction in; prescriptions without a listed indication for antimicrobial therapy, prescriptions without appropriate accompanying microbiological tests and the provision of unnecessary repeat prescriptions (p < 0.001). Inappropriate antimicrobial prescriptions observed pre-intervention for medical termination of pregnancy ceased post-intervention.
Auditing GP antimicrobial prescriptions identified prescribing practices inconsistent with Australian guidelines. However, implementation of a simple education program led to significantly improved antimicrobial prescribing by GPs. These findings indicate the important role of AMS and continued antimicrobial education within general practice.
不适当和过度使用抗菌药物会导致抗菌药物耐药性。尽管社区抗菌药物处方率相对较高,但在澳大利亚,普通实践中尚未确立抗菌药物管理(AMS)原则。已经实施了一些干预措施,但这些措施并没有显著减少或改善全科医生(GP)对抗菌药物的处方。因此,本研究旨在评估一项新的 GP 教育干预措施对抗菌药物处方的适当性以及 GP 遵守抗菌药物处方指南的影响。
2018 年,在一家大型诊所推出了一项简单的 GP 教育干预措施,旨在改善抗菌药物的处方。它包括与全科医生进行面对面的教育会议,介绍 AMS 原则、抗菌药物耐药性、当前的处方指南和微生物检测。在教育干预前后对处方实践进行了抗生素适宜性审核。使用百分比对数据进行总结,并使用卡方检验和泊松回归(结果报告为风险比(RR)和 95%置信区间(CI))比较时间点。
分别从 2016 年 7 月和 2018 年 7 月提取了 376 和 369 份处方的数据。在适当的抗菌药物选择(73.9% 对 92.8%,RR=1.26;95%CI=1.18-1.34)、适当的疗程(53.1% 对 87.7%,RR=1.65;95%CI=1.49-1.83)和指南的依从性(42.2% 对 58.5%,RR=1.39,95%CI=1.19-1.61)方面均有显著改善。干预后,抗菌药物持续时间方向的记录、患者随访以及患者体重的记录显著增加(p<0.001)。没有列出抗菌药物治疗指征的处方、没有适当伴随微生物学检查的处方和不必要的重复处方的数量显著减少(p<0.001)。干预前,用于医疗终止妊娠的不适当抗菌药物处方在干预后停止。
审核全科医生的抗菌药物处方发现,处方实践不符合澳大利亚指南。然而,实施简单的教育计划显著改善了全科医生的抗菌药物处方。这些发现表明 AMS 以及在普通实践中持续进行抗菌药物教育的重要作用。