학술논문

Involvement of pharmacist-reviewed urine cultures and sexually transmitted infections in the emergency department reduces time to antimicrobial optimization.
Document Type
Article
Source
American Journal of Health-System Pharmacy. 2020 Supplement, Vol. 77, pS54-S58. 5p. 1 Diagram, 3 Charts.
Subject
*URINARY tract infection diagnosis
*ACADEMIC medical centers
*ANTI-infective agents
*ANTIBIOTICS
*CONFIDENCE intervals
*HOSPITAL admission & discharge
*HOSPITAL emergency services
*PATIENTS
*SEXUALLY transmitted diseases
*TIME
*URINALYSIS
*WORKFLOW
*TREATMENT effectiveness
*BLIND experiment
*RETROSPECTIVE studies
Language
ISSN
1079-2082
Abstract
Purpose To streamline workflow of the culture review process in the emergency department (ED), a transition from a nurse-driven to a pharmacist-initiated process was implemented. Methods This was a single-center retrospective study conducted at an adult urban level 1 trauma academic medical center. The pharmacist-initiated culture review process was compared to the previous nurse-initiated process. The primary objective was time from final culture result to patient contact by an advanced practice provider. Secondary objectives included incidence of treatment failure and hospital admission within 30 days of ED visit. Results A total of 283 patients met inclusion criteria: 144 patients in the pre-intervention group and 139 patients in the postintervention group. Patients were contacted a median time of 15.7 hours (95% confidence interval [CI], 9.88-18.83) earlier for definitive urinary tract infection antibiotic therapy and 46.7 hours (95% CI, 33.34-61.62) earlier for definitive sexually transmitted infection therapy in the pharmacist-initiated workflow compared to the nurse-initiated workflow (P < 0.001). Treatment failure occurred in 0.01% of patients in the postintervention group and 6.3% in the pre-intervention group (P = 0.01). Hospital admission within 30 days of the ED visit occurred in 0% of patients in the postintervention group and 4.2% in the pre-intervention group (P = 0.03). Conclusion Pharmacist-initiated culture review in the ED at an academic medical center reduced time from final culture to patient contact for optimal antibiotic therapy and decreased hospital admission and treatment failure rates. A change in the culture review workflow involving pharmacists appears to have a positive impact on clinical outcomes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]