Data on Point Prevalence Surveys (PPSs) in India are limited yet. We report findings of a PPS conducted in a core "National Antimicrobial Consumption Network site" under National Centre for Disease Control - WHO project "Point prevalence survey of antimicrobial consumption at healthcare facilities." A cross-sectional survey was conducted as per the "WHO methodology for PPS on antibiotic use in hospitals" in a tertiary care hospital in India in December 2021. Data were collected using predesigned and pretested questionnaire in separate hospital, ward, and patient forms. Eight hundred two inpatients (excluding ICUs) were covered out of whom 299 (37.3%) were on antibiotics with 11.7% receiving 3 or more antibiotics. Surgical prophylaxis (SP) (42.5%) and community acquired infections (32.8%) were the most common indications for antibiotic use. Of the patients, 92.5% received SP for more than 24 hrs. Most commonly prescribed antibiotics were penicillins with beta-lactamase inhibitors (22.3%). Of the total antibiotic prescriptions, 81.5% were from WHO essential medicines list and 12% from "not recommended" WHO AWaRe classification. Of the antibiotic prescriptions, 84.6% were parenteral. Few prescriptions complied with standard treatment guidelines (1.9%), documented indication for antibiotic use (11.6%), and stop/review date (4.4%) in notes. Double anaerobic cover accounted for 6.8% of the total prescriptions. Some identified areas for improvement were: formulation of hospital antibiotic guidelines, promoting culture of sending cultures, improvement in surgical antibiotic prophylaxis, decreasing use of antibiotic combinations and double anaerobic cover, fostering IV to oral switch of antibiotics, and ensuring effective communication among health care workers by documenting adequate information in medical notes.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1089/mdr.2022.0170 | DOI Listing |
Synapse
January 2025
Department of Science, De La Salle College, Institute of the Brothers of the Christian Schools, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
Alcohol consumption is known to affect dopamine (DA) release in the brain, with significant implications for understanding addiction and its neurobiological underpinnings. This meta-analysis examined the effects of acute alcohol administration on striatal DA release in healthy humans as measured with [C]-raclopride positron emission tomography (PET). Oral alcohol administration was associated with a significant reduction in [C]-raclopride binding potential (BP) in the ventral striatum (Cohen's d = -0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSoc Sci Med
December 2024
Department of Community Medicine and Global Health, University of Oslo, Norway. Electronic address:
Increasing rates of antimicrobial resistance has accelerated global efforts to reduce antibiotic use. While antibiotic resistance poses a significant threat, especially in low-income settings, there is a scarcity of research on how people in such environments, including refugee camps, access and use antibiotics. This article explores factors that contribute to the shaping of antibiotic use in Shatila refugee camp in Lebanon.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFLupus Sci Med
December 2024
Medicine, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts, USA
Objective: To evaluate the treatment patterns, medication adherence, concomitant corticosteroid use, factors influencing sequence of therapies (SOTs), healthcare resource utilisation (HCRU) and associated costs in adults with SLE in the USA.
Methods: Claims data from the Merative MarketScan Commercial and Medicare Supplemental Database between 2011 and 2019 were used to identify patients with incident SLE. The date of first claim with SLE was defined as the index date, with a 24-month pre-index and ≥24-month post-index period.
J Sep Sci
December 2024
Key Laboratory of Yangtze River Environment, Ministry of Education, College of Environmental Science and Engineering, Tongji University, Shanghai, the People's Republic of China.
Disinfection by-products (DBPs) have received considerable focus due to potential teratogenic, carcinogenic, and mutagenic effects; however, there is an evident gap in the availability of analytical methodologies for the simultaneous determination of DBPs in fish, especially iodinated DBPs. This paper developed an innovative analytical method for the simultaneous determination of 12 DBPs, including four trihalomethanes (THMs), three haloacetonitriles, and five iodinated THMs (I-THMs), in fish muscle, utilizing solvent extraction followed by gas chromatography with electron capture detection. The method incorporates tert-butyl methyl ether as an extraction solvent, performing efficient vortex mixing, extraction, and centrifugation under reduced temperature conditions to facilitate the processing of physically disrupted fish tissues.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBMC Microbiol
December 2024
Veterinary Public Health, College of Veterinary Medicine and Agriculture, Addis Ababa University, Bishoftu, Ethiopia.
Background: Salmonella enterica is a major cause of foodborne illness and mortality worldwide, but its presence in milk along the milk supply chain and associated public health risks are under-studied. This research was aimed to investigate the occurrence and antimicrobial susceptibility of Salmonella enterica in milk, milking environments, milkers' hands, and diarrheic patients in Wolaita Sodo, Ethiopia.
Methods: We collected 644 samples from 106 dairy farms that include direct milk from cow, bulk tank milk, milkers' hand swabs, teat surfaces swabs, farm floors swabs, milk storage containers swabs, collectors' bulk milk, retailers' bulk milk, and stool from diarrheic patients.
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