Assessment of the quality of antimicrobial prescribing among hospitalized patients in a teaching hospital in Ghana: findings and implications.

Q2 Medicine
Hospital practice (1995) Pub Date : 2023-10-01 Epub Date: 2023-07-28 DOI:10.1080/21548331.2023.2241344
Israel Abebrese Sefah, David Nyamadi, Amanj Kurdi, Amos Adapalala Bugri, Frances Kerr, Peter Yamoah, Giuseppe Pichierri, Brian Godman
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Objective: There is a need to assess the quality of antimicrobial prescribing in hospitals as a first step toward improving future prescribing to reduce antimicrobial resistance (AMR). This is in line with Ghana's National Action Plan.

Methods: A point prevalence survey of antimicrobial use was undertaken at the adult medical, surgical, and pediatric wards of Tamale Teaching Hospital using the standardized Global Point Prevalence Survey (GPPS) tool. Key target areas include adherence to current guidelines, limiting the prescribing of 'Watch' antibiotics with their greater resistance potential, and limiting the prescribing of antibiotics post-operatively to prevent surgical site infections (SSIs).

Results: Out of 217 patients' medical records assessed, 155 (71.4%) patients were prescribed antimicrobials. The rates were similar among children (73.9%) and adults (70.3%). Most of the antibiotics prescribed were in the WHO 'Watch' group (71.0%) followed by those in the 'Access' group (29%). Out of the 23 cases indicated for surgical antimicrobial prophylaxis to prevent SSIs, the majority (69.6%) were given doses for more than 1 day, with none receiving a single dose. This needs addressing to reduce AMR and costs. Guideline compliance with the current Ghanaian Standard Treatment Guidelines (GSTG) for managing infections was also low (28.7%). The type of indication was the only independent predictor of guideline compliance (aOR = 0.013 CI 0.001-0.127, p-value = 0.001).

Conclusion: Given current concerns with antimicrobial prescribing in this hospital, deliberate efforts must be made to improve the appropriateness of prescribing to reduce AMR via targeted antimicrobial stewardship programs.

加纳一家教学医院住院患者抗菌药物处方质量评估:结果和意义
目的:有必要对医院抗菌药物处方质量进行评估,作为改善未来处方以减少抗菌药物耐药性(AMR)的第一步。这符合加纳的国家行动计划。方法:采用标准化的全球点流行率调查(GPPS)工具,对Tamale教学医院成人内科、外科和儿科病房的抗菌药物使用情况进行点流行调查。关键目标领域包括遵守现行指南,限制使用耐药潜力较大的“观察”抗生素,以及限制术后使用抗生素以预防手术部位感染。结果:在217例患者的医疗记录中,155例(71.4%)患者获得了抗菌素处方。儿童(73.9%)和成人(70.3%)的发病率相似。大多数抗生素处方在世卫组织“观察”组(71.0%),其次是“获取”组(29%)。在23例需要外科抗菌药物预防ssi的病例中,大多数(69.6%)的用药时间超过1天,没有人接受单剂治疗。这需要解决,以减少抗菌素耐药性和成本。现行加纳标准治疗指南(GSTG)在管理感染方面的指南依从性也很低(28.7%)。适应症类型是指南依从性的唯一独立预测因子(aOR = 0.013 CI 0.001-0.127, p值= 0.001)。结论:鉴于该医院目前对抗菌药物处方的担忧,必须有意识地努力通过有针对性的抗菌药物管理项目来提高处方的适宜性,以减少抗生素耐药性。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Hospital practice (1995)
Hospital practice (1995) Medicine-Medicine (all)
CiteScore
2.80
自引率
0.00%
发文量
54
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