AI Article Synopsis

  • The study examined antimicrobial prescribing practices for adult inpatients at Canterbury District Health Board, focusing on adherence to guidelines and funding criteria.
  • About 42% of inpatients received antimicrobial therapy, mainly to treat infections, with a high compliance rate for prescriptions (74% guideline-compliant).
  • However, key quality indicators such as documentation of indications and timely cessation of surgical prophylaxis fell below target rates, indicating a need for improvement in prescribing practices.

Article Abstract

Aims: To determine the nature and appropriateness of antimicrobial prescribing in adult inpatients at Canterbury District Health Board (CDHB).

Methods: Multidisciplinary teams collected clinical details for all adult inpatients on antimicrobial therapy at three CDHB facilities (~1,100 beds) and made standardised assessments based on the Australian National Antimicrobial Prescribing Survey (http://naps.org.au) against local guidelines and national funding criteria.

Results: Antimicrobial therapy was prescribed to 42% of inpatients (322/760), usually to treat infections [377/480 prescriptions (79%)], with amoxicillin+clavulanic acid the agent most commonly prescribed [72/480 prescriptions (15%)]. Of assessable prescriptions, 74% (205/278) were guideline compliant, 98% (469/480) were funding criteria compliant, and 83% (375/451) were appropriate clinically. Prescriptions for the most common indications-surgical prophylaxis [66/480 (14%)] and community-acquired pneumonia [56/480 (12%)]-were often non-compliant with guidelines (32% and 41%, respectively) and inappropriate (18% and 21%, respectively). Overall, the indication was documented in 353/480 (74%) prescriptions, the review/stop date documented in 145/480 (30%) prescriptions, and surgical prophylaxis stopped within 24 hours in 53/66 (80%) prescriptions.

Conclusions: Most antimicrobial prescriptions were appropriate and complied with guidelines. Compliance with key quality indicators (indication documented, review/stop date documented, and surgical prophylaxis ceased within 24 hours) were well below target (>95%) and needs improvement.

Download full-text PDF

Source

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

adult inpatients
12
inpatients canterbury
8
canterbury district
8
district health
8
health board
8
antimicrobial prescribing
8
antimicrobial therapy
8
indication documented
8
review/stop documented
8
surgical prophylaxis
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!