急诊科药剂师主导的抗生素处方管理干预的影响

Emily A. Plauche, Kayla R. Stover, Katie E. Barber, David A. Cretella, Mary Joyce B. Wingler
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:抗生素通常在急诊科开处方,但有限的研究已经发表,描述了这一实践领域的抗菌药物管理干预措施。本研究的目的是评估以药剂师为主导的多方面抗菌剂管理干预对急诊科抗生素处方的选择和持续时间的有效性。方法本研究采用单中心准实验方法,对2021年10月1日至2022年2月28日(干预前组)和2022年10月1日至2023年2月28日(干预后组)成人急诊科出院患者进行评估。2022年9月,从电子病历中删除了抗生素的默认持续时间,并对急诊科开处方者进行了正确选择抗生素和持续时间的教育。新诊断为急性膀胱炎、急性肾盂肾炎、社区获得性肺炎(CAP)、蜂窝织炎或皮肤脓肿的成年患者在急诊科出院时使用了新的口服抗生素处方。主要结果是抗生素治疗的持续时间。结果共纳入220例患者(干预前110例;110 postintervention)。两组之间的基线特征相似,急性膀胱炎(45%)是最常见的适应症。两组患者的平均抗生素使用时间均较低,治疗前后差异无统计学意义(6.60天vs 6.35天;P = 0.382)。干预前组与干预后组抗生素不适宜性降低10% (P = 0.075)。结论治疗前后的总体持续时间低于预期,大多数患者因多种常见感染而接受的抗生素治疗少于7天。确定了在急诊科执行管理工作的几个挑战,并根据本研究的结果计划了进一步的干预措施。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Impact of a pharmacist-led stewardship intervention for antibiotic prescribing in the emergency department

Background

Antibiotics are commonly prescribed in emergency departments but limited studies have been published describing antimicrobial stewardship interventions in this practice area. The purpose of this study was to assess the effectiveness of a multifaceted pharmacist-led antimicrobial stewardship intervention on selection and duration of antibiotics prescribed in the emergency department.

Methods

This single-center, quasi-experimental study evaluated patients discharged from the adult emergency department between October 1, 2021 to February 28, 2022 (preintervention group) and October 1, 2022 to February 28, 2023 (postintervention). Antibiotic default durations were removed from the electronic medical record in September 2022, and education was provided to emergency department prescribers on proper antibiotic selection and duration. Adult patients with a new presumed diagnosis of acute cystitis, acute pyelonephritis, community-acquired pneumonia (CAP), cellulitis, or skin abscess with a new prescription for an oral antibiotic at emergency department discharge were included. The primary outcome was the duration of antibiotic therapy prescribed.

Results

There were 220 patients included (110 preintervention; 110 postintervention). Baseline characteristics were similar between groups, and acute cystitis (45%) was the most common indication. The mean antibiotic duration was low in both groups, and there was no statistically significant difference between pre- and postgroups (6.60 vs. 6.35 days; P = 0.382). A 10% decrease in antibiotic inappropriateness was found in the preintervention to postintervention groups (P = 0.075).

Conclusion

Overall duration was lower than expected in the pre- and postgroups, with most patients receiving less than 7 days of antibiotics for multiple common infections. Several challenges were identified for performing stewardship in the emergency departments and further interventions have been planned based on the results of this study.
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