While antimicrobial stewardship programs (ASPs) are well established at most large medical centers, small or rural facilities often do not have the same resources; therefore, different methods must be developed to start or expand ASPs for these hospitals. The purpose of this quality improvement study was to describe the implementation of a pharmacist-led remote ASP and assess the effect on antimicrobial use. Antimicrobial use in days of therapy per 1000 patient days (DOT/1000 PD) was compared between the six months before and after remote ASP implementation. Changes in system-wide, facility-specific, and target antimicrobial use were evaluated. Pharmacist interventions, acceptance rates, and number of times infectious disease (ID) physician assistance was sought were also tracked. System-wide antimicrobial use was 4.6% less in the post-implementation time period than in the pre-implementation time period, with vancomycin, piperacillin/tazobactam, and fluoroquinolones having the greatest reductions in use. Ninety-one percent of interventions made during the post-implementation period were accepted. ID physician review was requested 38 times, and direct ID physician intervention was required six times. Remote ASPs delivered from a central facility to serve a larger system may reduce antimicrobial use, especially against targeted agents, with minimal increase in ID physician workload.
Summary Background Fluoroquinolone (FQ) antibiotics have become a target of many antimicrobial stewardship programmes. Multiple post-marketing warnings from the Food and Drug Administration caution against use of this drug class for certain infections due to risk of harmful adverse effects outweighing benefit. Commonly employed strategies to affect antibiotic prescribing can be restrictive and without improvement in overall antibiotic appropriateness or decrease in collateral damage. Aim To develop a strategy for sustainable optimization of FQ antibiotics. Setting Multi-state health-system of 14 hospitals and medical centers. Methods The health-system antimicrobial stewardship program identified the opportunity to improve FQ utilization. In collaboration with our data and analytics team, specific targets of FQ use in pneumonia and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease were established. Face-to-face provider education and prospective audit and feedback were the mainstays of the campaign. Enhancements to the electronic medical record to support the initiative were also implemented. Findings There was an overall decrease in FQ utilization by 56.9%. For pneumonia use of FQs decreased from 16.4% to 8.1% and in COPD changed from 29.6% to 9.7% over the same time period. Conclusions A non-restrictive FQ optimization initiative based on education and feedback decreased both FQ consumption and total antibiotic use across a large multi-hospital health-system.
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