Abstract
Abstract
Efforts to improve antimicrobial prescribing are occurring within a changing healthcare landscape, which includes the expanded use of telehealth technology. The wider adoption of telehealth presents both challenges and opportunities for promoting antimicrobial stewardship. Telehealth provides 2 avenues for remote infectious disease (ID) specialists to improve inpatient antimicrobial prescribing: telehealth-supported antimicrobial stewardship and tele-ID consultations. Those 2 activities can work separately or synergistically. Studies on telehealth-supported antimicrobial stewardship have reported a reduction in inpatient antimicrobial prescribing, cost savings related to less antimicrobial use, a decrease in Clostridioides difficile infections, and improved antimicrobial susceptibility patterns for common organisms. Tele-ID consultation is associated with fewer hospital transfers, a shorter length of hospital stay, and decreased mortality. The implementation of these activities can be flexible depending on local needs and available resources, but several barriers may be encountered. Opportunities also exist to improve antimicrobial use in outpatient settings. Telehealth provides a more rapid mechanism for conducting outpatient ID consultations, and increasing use of telehealth for routine and urgent outpatient visits present new challenges for antimicrobial stewardship. In primary care, urgent care, and emergency care settings, unnecessary antimicrobial use for viral acute respiratory tract infections is common during telehealth encounters, as is the case for fact-to-face encounters. For some diagnoses, such as otitis media and pharyngitis, antimicrobials are further overprescribed via telehealth. Evidence is still lacking on the optimal stewardship strategies to improve antimicrobial prescribing during telehealth encounters in ambulatory care, but conventional outpatient stewardship strategies are likely transferable. Further work is warranted to fill this knowledge gap.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Reference54 articles.
1. 18. New antimicrobial stewardship standard. The Joint Commission website. https://www.jointcommission.org/-/media/enterprise/tjc/imported-resource-assets/documents/new_antimicrobial_stewardship_standardpdf.pdf?db=web&hash=69307456CCE435B134854392C7FA7D76. Accessed May 19, 2021.
2. Developing an antimicrobial stewardship program across a rural health system: the Avera Health experience;Laible;Am J Health Syst Pharm,2019
3. 48. Suzuki, H , Marra, AR , Hasegawa, S , et al. Outpatient antibiotic-prescribing for common infections via telemedicine versus face-to-face visits: systematic literature review and meta-analysis. Antimicrob Stewardship Healthcare Epidemiol 2021;1:e24.
4. Shedding light on telemedicine and online prescribing: the need to balance access to health care and quality of care;Hoffman;Am J Law Med,2020
5. Electronic consultations (e-consults): advancing infectious disease care in a large veterans affairs healthcare system;Strymish;Clin Infect Dis,2017
Cited by
2 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献