: A review of the impact of pharmacists on appropriate medication selection, timing of administration, and as members of a multidisciplinary sepsis response team. : Early goal-directed therapy (EGDT), currently recommended by the 2013 Surviving Sepsis Campaign guidelines for the management of patients with sepsis, includes the administration of appropriate antibiotics in patients with septic shock within the first hour. Multidisciplinary teams containing pharmacists have been shown to decrease time to antibiotic delivery, time to antibiotic administration, and patient mortality. The pharmacist can act as a drug information resource, expedite the medication verification and procurement process, and offer suggestions on how to better manage the patients. Pharmacists are often consulted for dosing and antibiotic selection recommendations for patients with sepsis, but they can also help increase the appropriateness of antibiotics selected. Additional recommendations and interventions made by pharmacists include fluid management and vasopressor facilitation for the more severe patients. A sepsis management team that included a pharmacist increased the number of patients receiving appropriate antibiotics within the first hour by as much as 22-fold. Another study has demonstrated that intensive care units with a pharmacist are associated with a 4% decrease in sepsis patient mortality compared to those without a pharmacist. : Multidisciplinary teams containing pharmacists have been shown to decrease time to administration of antibiotics, increase appropriate selection of medications, and decrease mortality; they may also decrease overall health care costs.

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