Ceftriaxone and cefotaxime use in Victorian hospitals
Autor: | Julie A V Lord, Graham Byrnes, Jonathan Dartnell, Lisa L Ioannides-Demos, Liliana Munafo, Tony M. Korman, Marion B Robertson, Sue W Kirsa |
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Rok vydání: | 2002 |
Předmět: |
medicine.medical_specialty
Cefotaxime Victoria Concordance Surgical prophylaxis Drug Utilization Review Internal medicine Lower respiratory tract infection medicine Humans Hospitals Teaching Intensive care medicine Antibacterial agent Cross Infection business.industry Ceftriaxone Respiratory disease Bacterial Infections General Medicine medicine.disease Hospitals Cephalosporins Pneumonia Logistic Models Practice Guidelines as Topic Guideline Adherence business medicine.drug |
Zdroj: | Monash University |
ISSN: | 1326-5377 0025-729X |
DOI: | 10.5694/j.1326-5377.2002.tb04549.x |
Popis: | Objective To determine patterns of use of ceftriaxone and cefotaxime (CEFX) in Victorian hospitals and to identify areas for improvement. Design, patients and setting A concurrent, observational evaluation of CEFX use in patients commencing a course of these drugs between 8 and 14 September, 1999, in 51 Victorian hospitals. Main outcome measures Proportion of patients treated with CEFX; indications; duration of use; concordance with recommendations of national antibiotic guidelines (Therapeutic guidelines: antibiotic, 10th edition [AG10]). Results 671 patients were treated with CEFX. The overall rate of use was 43 patients per 1000 inpatient separations. Treatment of respiratory tract infection accounted for 352 patients (52%) and surgical prophylaxis for 99 patients (15%). Treatment of skin/soft tissue, urinary tract and gastrointestinal tract infections accounted for about 7% of patients each. The median duration of CEFX courses was 3.0 days. The overall rate of concordance with indications recommended in AG10 was 27%. The rate of concordance for empirical treatment of respiratory tract infection was 24%. Of the 195 patients treated empirically with CEFX for community-acquired respiratory tract infection and assessed as non-concordant, 64% did not have radiological evidence of pneumonia, and a further 30% did not fulfill the criteria for severe pneumonia. All courses given for surgical prophylaxis were non-concordant. Conclusions CEFX is widely used in Victorian hospitals, mostly to treat lower respiratory tract infection and in surgical prophylaxis of infection. The rate of concordance with AG10 is low. Potential areas for intervention include empirical treatment of respiratory tract infection and use in surgical prophylaxis. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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