Empiric management of community‐acquired pneumonia in Australian emergency departments
Autor: | K. A. McIntosh, Kylie L Easton, Lisa K Pulver, D. J. Maxwell |
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Rok vydání: | 2005 |
Předmět: |
Adult
Male medicine.medical_specialty Adolescent Cross-sectional study Pneumonia severity index Concordance Penicillins Hospitals Private Hospitals Urban Community-acquired pneumonia medicine Humans Hospital Mortality Intensive care medicine Contraindication Aged Retrospective Studies Aged 80 and over Medical Audit business.industry Contraindications Australia Retrospective cohort study Pneumonia General Medicine Emergency department Length of Stay Middle Aged Hospitals District medicine.disease Anti-Bacterial Agents Community-Acquired Infections Cross-Sectional Studies Practice Guidelines as Topic Emergency medicine Female Emergency Service Hospital business |
Zdroj: | Medical Journal of Australia. 183:520-524 |
ISSN: | 1326-5377 0025-729X |
DOI: | 10.5694/j.1326-5377.2005.tb07153.x |
Popis: | Objective: To describe empiric community-acquired pneumonia (CAP) management in Australian hospital emergency departments (EDs) and evaluate this against national guidelines, including use of the pneumonia severity index and antibiotic selection. Design: A multicentre, cross-sectional, retrospective audit, April 2003 to February 2005. Setting: 37 Australian hospitals: 22 principal referral hospitals, six large major city hospitals, four large regional hospitals, four medium hospitals and one private hospital. Participants: Adult patients with a diagnosis of CAP made in the ED. Data on 20 consecutive CAP ED presentations were collected in participating hospitals. Outcome measures: Documented use of the pneumonia severity index, initial antibiotic therapy prescribed in the ED, average length of stay, inpatient mortality, and concordance with national guidelines. Results: 691 CAP presentations were included. Pneumonia severity index use was documented in 5% of cases. Antibiotic therapy covering common bacterial causes of CAP was prescribed in 67% of presentations, although overall concordance with national guidelines was 18%. Antibiotic prescribing was discordant due to inadequate empiric antimicrobial cover, allergy status (including contraindication to penicillin), inappropriate route of administration and/or inappropriate antibiotic choice according to recommendations. There was no significant difference between concordant and discordant antibiotic prescribing episodes in average length of stay (5.0 v 5.7 days; P=0.22) or inpatient mortality (1.6% v 4.1%; chi(2) = 1.82; P=0.18). Conclusions: Antibiotic therapy for CAP prescribed in Australian EDs varied. Concordance with national CAP guidelines was generally low. Targeted interventions are required to improve concordance. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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