Stress ulcer prophylaxis is commonly prescribed in the intensive care unit but can be inappropriately commenced or continued on discharge, exposing patients to potential harm. We aimed to evaluate whether a prescribing guideline, education program and pharmacist oversight would reduce inappropriate continuation of stress ulcer prophylaxis. This was a multicentre pre- (2014) and post- (2016) quality improvement study across five Australian intensive care units. Cost data were estimated using local information about prescribing patterns, and the relationship between long-term use and adverse events. A total of 531 patients were included in the pre- and 393 in the post-implementation periods. The proportion of hospital survivors inappropriately continued on stress ulcer prophylaxis reduced from 78/184 (42.4%) to 11/143 (7.7%) in the post-implementation period (odds ratio = 8.83; 95% confidence interval 4.47–17.45; P < 0.0001). Clostridium difficile–associated disease reduced from 10 patients to one in the pre- to post-implementation groups. The extrapolated direct savings to all Australian intensive care units from reduced proton pump inhibitor prescribing are relatively small (AUD$2.08 million/year), but the reduction in complications has both benefits for patients and indirect savings of AUD$16.59 million/year nationally. In patients admitted to the intensive care unit, the introduction of a simple, bundled intervention resulted in a significant decrease in inappropriate continuation of stress ulcer prophylaxis at hospital discharge and a reduction in recognised complications, and substantial cost savings.
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