AI Article Synopsis

  • The first point prevalence survey at Korle Bu Teaching Hospital aimed to establish a baseline for antimicrobial use and identify necessary stewardship interventions.
  • During the survey, 988 patients were assessed, showing an overall antimicrobial prevalence of 53.3%, with community-acquired infections treated more frequently than healthcare-associated ones.
  • Key findings included that the most common reasons for antimicrobial prescribing were pneumonia, skin infections, and sepsis, with a notable focus on compliance and documentation in prescriptions, suggesting potential improvements in antimicrobial stewardship.

Article Abstract

The first comprehensive point prevalence survey at the Korle Bu Teaching Hospital (KBTH) was performed as part of the 2019 Global Point Prevalence Survey (Global-PPS) on antimicrobials. The aim was to establish a PPS baseline for the whole hospital and to identify required stewardship interventions. The PPS was conducted over three days in June 2019 using the GLOBAL-PPS standardized method for surveillance of antimicrobial utilization in hospitals to evaluate antimicrobial prescribing. In all, 988 patients were admitted to 69 wards. Overall antimicrobial prevalence was 53.3%. More community-acquired infections (CAI) were treated empirically compared to health-care associated infections (94.0% vs. 86.1% respectively, = 0.002). Main indications for prescribing antimicrobials were pneumonia (18.4%), skin and soft tissue infections (11.4%) and sepsis (11.1%). Among antimicrobials, systemic antibiotics accounted for 83.5%, of which amoxicillin with beta-lactam inhibitor (17.5%), metronidazole (11.8%) and ceftriaxone (11.5%) dominated. Guideline compliance was 89.0%. Stop/review dates were completed in 33.4% and documented reason was recorded in 53.0% of all prescriptions. If the findings in this PPS can be addressed antimicrobial stewardship at the KBTH stands to improve significantly.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8698913PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/antibiotics10121528DOI Listing

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