Antibiotic consumption and utilization at a large tertiary care level hospital in Uganda: A point prevalence survey.

IF 2.6 3区 综合性期刊 Q1 MULTIDISCIPLINARY SCIENCES
PLoS ONE Pub Date : 2025-01-10 eCollection Date: 2025-01-01 DOI:10.1371/journal.pone.0313587
Mark Kizito, Darius Owachi, Falisy Lule, Laura Jung, Vivian Bazanye, Ibrahim Mugerwa, Susan Nabadda, Charles Kabugo
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Introduction: Effective antimicrobial stewardship programs require data on antimicrobial consumption (AMC) and utilization (AMU) to guide interventions. However, such data is often scarce in low-resource settings. We describe the consumption and utilization of antibiotics at a large tertiary-level hospital in Uganda.

Methods: In this cross-sectional study at Kiruddu National Referral Hospital, we analyzed medicine delivery records for the period July 2021 to June 2022, accessed on 12/08/2022, to extract AMC data expressed as defined daily doses (DDDs) per 1000 inhabitants per day (DID). We used the WHO point prevalence survey (PPS) to analyze AMU data with a systematic sampling of outpatient department (OPD) for a period between June and August 2022 and selected all inpatient department (IPD) patients admitted before 8:00 AM on 27/11/2022. AMU data was analyzed as the proportion of individual antibiotic prescriptions, indications for prescriptions, and compliance with the national treatment guidelines. Both AMC and AMU data were categorized by the WHO AWaRe (access, watch, and reserve) criteria.

Results: In the year 2021-2022, a total of 6.05 DID of antibiotics were consumed comprising 3.61 DID (59.6%) access, 2.44 DID (40.3%) watch, and 0.003 (0.1%) reserve antibiotics. The most consumed antibiotics comprised penicillin (1.61 DID, 26.7%), cephalosporins (1.51, 25%), and imidazole (1.10 DID, 18.1%). A total of 119/211 (56%) patients in the OPD and 99/172 (57.5%) patients in the IPD were prescribed antibiotics. Of the 158 OPD antibiotic prescriptions, 73 (46.2%) were access, 72 (45.6%) were watch, 0 (0%) were reserve, and 13 (8.2%) were unclassified antibiotics. Of the 162 IPD antibiotic prescriptions, 62 (38.3%) were access, 88 (54.3%) were watch, 01 (0.6%) was reserve, and 11 (6.8%) were unclassified antibiotics. Indications for antibiotic prescriptions in the OPD comprised respiratory tract infections (53, 38.1%), urinary tract infections (34, 26.6%), gastrointestinal infections (20, 14.4%), sepsis (17, 12.2%), and medical prophylaxis (12, 8.7%). The indications for antibiotic prescriptions in the IPD comprised sepsis (28.2%), respiratory tract infections (18.3%), burn wounds (14.1%), and gastrointestinal infections (14.1%).

Conclusion: Prescription of watch antibiotics in both OPD and IPD hospital settings was high. Establishment of robust antimicrobial stewardship measures could help improve the rational prescription of antibiotics.

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乌干达一家大型三级医院的抗生素消费和利用:一项点流行率调查。
有效的抗菌药物管理规划需要抗菌药物消费(AMC)和使用(AMU)的数据来指导干预措施。然而,在资源匮乏的环境中,这种数据往往是稀缺的。我们描述了乌干达一家大型三级医院抗生素的消费和利用情况。方法:在基鲁杜国家转诊医院的这项横断面研究中,我们分析了2021年7月至2022年6月期间的药物交付记录,获取日期为2022年8月12日,以每1000名居民每天(DID)的定义日剂量(DDDs)表示的AMC数据。我们采用世卫组织点状患病率调查(PPS)分析了2022年6月至8月期间门诊(OPD)的AMU数据,并选择了2022年11月27日上午8点之前入院的所有住院(IPD)患者。对AMU数据进行分析,包括单个抗生素处方的比例、处方的适应症以及对国家治疗指南的依从性。AMC和AMU数据均按WHO AWaRe(获取、观察和保留)标准进行分类。结果:2021-2022年,共使用了6.05种抗生素,其中获取使用了3.61种(59.6%),使用了2.44种(40.3%),储备使用了0.003种(0.1%)。使用最多的抗生素包括青霉素(1.61,26.7%)、头孢菌素(1.51,25%)和咪唑(1.10,18.1%)。门诊共有119/211例(56%)患者使用抗生素,门诊共有99/172例(57.5%)患者使用抗生素。158张门诊抗菌药物处方中,可及处方73张(46.2%),观察处方72张(45.6%),储备处方0张(0%),未分类处方13张(8.2%)。162张抗菌药物处方中,可获取处方62张(38.3%),观察处方88张(54.3%),储备处方01张(0.6%),未分类处方11张(6.8%)。OPD抗生素处方的适应症包括呼吸道感染(53,38.1%)、尿路感染(34,26.6%)、胃肠道感染(20,14.4%)、败血症(17,12.2%)和医学预防(12,8.7%)。IPD中抗生素处方的适应症包括败血症(28.2%)、呼吸道感染(18.3%)、烧伤(14.1%)和胃肠道感染(14.1%)。结论:门诊和IPD医院抗菌药物处方均较高。建立健全的抗菌药物管理措施有助于提高抗菌药物的合理处方。
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
PLoS ONE
PLoS ONE 生物-生物学
CiteScore
6.20
自引率
5.40%
发文量
14242
审稿时长
3.7 months
期刊介绍: PLOS ONE is an international, peer-reviewed, open-access, online publication. PLOS ONE welcomes reports on primary research from any scientific discipline. It provides: * Open-access—freely accessible online, authors retain copyright * Fast publication times * Peer review by expert, practicing researchers * Post-publication tools to indicate quality and impact * Community-based dialogue on articles * Worldwide media coverage
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