美国儿科抗菌药物管理项目的策略、人员和多样性:美国儿科asp的策略和组成。

Antimicrobial stewardship & healthcare epidemiology : ASHE Pub Date : 2025-02-25 eCollection Date: 2025-01-01 DOI:10.1017/ash.2025.18
Christina S Manice, Alexander S Plattner, Edan Leshem, Jason G Newland, Mari M Nakamura
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引用次数: 0

摘要

目的:我们试图描述美国儿科抗菌药物管理项目(asp)的特征,包括其医院人口统计、人员配备、按医院规模供资的全职等效人员(fte),以及对推荐管理策略的相对重视程度。我们检查了ASP人员在学科、种族、民族、性别认同和抗菌药物管理经验方面的自我报告特征。设计:描述性两部分调查。环境:参与共享儿科抗菌药物管理报告(SHARPS)的医院的儿科asp, SHARPS是由bb70家儿童医院组成的儿科质量改进协作组织。参与者:调查分布到82家美国儿科asp,不包括没有儿科asp的医院。第一部分由ASP负责人(医生或药剂师)完成。第二部分分发给ASP团队成员。方法:第一部分讨论了与CDC 2019年医院抗生素管理项目核心要素相关的医院人口统计、ASP资金和项目选择。第二部分要求参与者匿名自我识别种族、民族、性别认同、培训和ASP经验持续时间。执行描述性统计。结果:62名ASP回应:61名(98%)来自正规ASP, 40名(65%)来自独立儿童医院。40例(65%)由一名ASP医师和药剂师共同领导。60例(97%)报告了专职住院医师FTE, 57例(92%)报告了专职住院药师FTE。大多数项目(35个[58%])报告人员支持不足。完成第二部分的125名ASP专业人员主要自称为白人(89人[71%]),少数自称为亚洲人(9人[15%])或黑人(4人[3%])。结论:美国儿科asp在满足CDC核心要素方面取得了实质性进展,但许多asp报告资源不足。我们发现ASP劳动力中代表性不足。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Strategies, personnel, and diversity of pediatric antimicrobial stewardship programs in the United States: Strategies and composition of US pediatric ASPs.

Objective: We sought to characterize US pediatric antimicrobial stewardship programs (ASPs), including their hospital demographics, staffing, funded full-time equivalents (FTEs) by hospital size, and relative emphasis on recommended stewardship strategies. We examined the self-reported characteristics of ASP personnel with regard to discipline, race, ethnicity, gender identity, and years of experience in antimicrobial stewardship.

Design: Descriptive two-part survey.

Setting: Pediatric ASPs at hospitals participating in Sharing Antimicrobial Reports for Pediatric Stewardship (SHARPS), a pediatric quality improvement collaborative of >70 children's hospitals.

Participants: Survey distributed to 82 US pediatric ASPs, excluding hospitals without pediatric ASPs. Part I completed by ASP leader (physician or pharmacist). Part II distributed to ASP team members.

Methods: Part I addressed hospital demographics, ASP funding, and program choices related to the CDC's 2019 Core Elements of Hospital Antibiotic Stewardship Programs. Part II requested that participants anonymously self-identify race, ethnicity, gender identity, training, and duration of ASP experience. Descriptive statistics performed.

Results: Sixty-two ASPs responded: 61 (98%) with formal ASP, 40 (65%) from freestanding children's hospitals. 40 (65%) co-led by an ASP physician and pharmacist. 60 (97%) reported dedicated inpatient physician FTE, 57 (92%) dedicated inpatient pharmacist FTE. Most programs (35 [58%]) reported inadequate staffing support. The 125 ASP professionals who completed Part II predominantly self-reported as White (89 [71%]), with fewer self-reporting as Asian (9 [15%]) or Black (4 [3%]).

Conclusion: US pediatric ASPs have achieved substantial progress in meeting the CDC Core Elements, but many report insufficient resources. We identified underrepresentation in the ASP workforce.

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