Analysis of antibiotic use in a large network of emergency departments

Author:

O’Neal Fredrick1,Kramer Joan2,Cooper Mandelin2,Septimus Edward3,Sharma Sanya2,Burgess L Hayley2

Affiliation:

1. Clinical Services Group, HCA Healthcare Nashville, and University of Tennessee College of Pharmacy, Nashville, TN

2. Clinical Services Group, HCA Healthcare Nashville, Nashville, TN

3. Department of Population Medicine, Harvard Medical School and Harvard Pilgrim Health Care Institute, Boston, MA

Abstract

Abstract Purpose To assess antibiotic selection, administration, and prescribing practices in emergency departments across a large hospital system using evidence-based practices and susceptibility patterns. Methods This retrospective data review was conducted using health system–level electronic data compiled from 145 emergency departments (EDs) across the United States. Data were examined for national generalizability, most common diagnoses of infectious origin seen in nonadmitted patients in the ED, most commonly administered antibiotics in the ED, and geographically defined areas’ unique patterns of antibiotic resistance and susceptibility. Results More than 627,000 unique patient encounters and 780,000 antibiotic administrations were assessed for trends in patient demographics, antibiotics administered for a diagnosis of infectious origin, and corresponding susceptibility patterns. Results indicated that practices in the EDs of this health system aligned with evidence-based practices for streptococcal pharyngitis, otitis media, cellulitis, and uncomplicated urinary tract infections. Conclusion These results provide a representative sample of the current state of practices within many EDs across the United States for nonadmitted patients. A similar data reconstruction can be completed by other health systems to assess their prescribing practices in the ED to improve and elevate care for patients visiting the emergency room and treated as outpatients.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Health Policy,Pharmacology

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