Reporting on antibiotic use patterns using the WHO Access, Watch, Reserve classification in the Caribbean

Author:

Rocke Tamarie12,El Omeiri Nathalie1,Quiros Rodolfo Ernesto1,Hsieh Jenny1,Ramon-Pardo Pilar1

Affiliation:

1. Pan American Health Organization, Washington, D.C., United States of America

2. tamarie.rocke@outlook.com

Abstract

Objective.

To assess antibiotic use in three hospitals in three Caribbean countries based on data from 2013 and 2018 using the World Health Organization Essential Medicines List “Access, Watch, Reserve” (AWaRe) classification

Methods.

A retrospective observational study, which analyzed the World Health Organization Point Prevalence Survey data from three hospitals in three Caribbean countries, to examine proportional AWaRe group antibiotic use for the top ten inpatient indications. The Access-to-Watch ratio was calculated, and the top three antibiotics prescribed in each hospital were determined.

Results.

The final data set included 376 prescriptions for the top ten indications in 766 inpatients. The hospital antibiotic use point prevalence for Hospital 1 was 35.6%, Hospital 2 was 48.6%, and Hospital 3 was 47.1%. The Access-to-Watch ratio for the top ten indications was 2.45, 1.36, and 1.72 in the three hospitals. Access group prevalence was 71.0% in Hospital 1, 57.6% in Hospital 2, and 63.2% in Hospital 3. There were no Reserve antibiotics prescribed in any of the institutions. The most common indication for Watch prescription was skin and soft tissue infections in Hospital 1 and pneumonia in Hospital 2 and 3.

Conclusions.

This study draws urgent attention to evidence of a high proportion of Watch antibiotic prescribing and lack of Reserve group antibiotics in three Caribbean countries. This research provides data that may inform national formulary and antimicrobial stewardship policy-making across the settings analyzed and the wider region.

Publisher

Pan American Health Organization

Subject

Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health

Reference32 articles.

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2. Pan American Health Organization. WHO/PAHO Hospital Antimicrobial Use Point Prevalence Survey on Antibiotic Use in Hospitals in Latin American and Caribbean Regions. Washington, DC: PAHO; 2018.

3. World Health Organization. Driving change in antimicrobial stewardship in a low-resource setting. WHO Glob Action Plan AMR Newsl. 2017;20:1.

4. Hsieh J, Sati H, Ramon-Pardo P, Bruinsma N, Galas MF, Rwangabwoba JM, et al. 2034. Standardized Point Prevalence Survey on Antibiotic Use to Inform Antimicrobial Stewardship Strategies in the Caribbean. Open Forum Infect Dis. 2019;6(Suppl 2):S683–S684.

5. World Health Organization [Internet]. Geneva: WHO; 2017 Sep 21 (accessed 16 March 2022). One Health. Available from: https://www.who.int/news-room/questions-and-answers/item/one-health

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