학술논문

Association of Inpatient Antimicrobial Utilization Measures with Antimicrobial Stewardship Activities and Facility Characteristics of Veterans Affairs Medical Centers
Document Type
article
Source
Journal of Hospital Medicine. 12(5)
Subject
Health Services and Systems
Health Sciences
Infectious Diseases
Clinical Research
Antimicrobial Resistance
Prevention
Health Services
Good Health and Well Being
Anti-Infective Agents
Antimicrobial Stewardship
Drug Utilization Review
Hospitalization
Hospitals
Veterans
Humans
Pharmacy Service
Hospital
Surveys and Questionnaires
United States
United States Department of Veterans Affairs
Veterans
Clinical Sciences
General & Internal Medicine
Health services and systems
Nursing
Language
Abstract
BackgroundAntimicrobial stewardship programs (ASPs) have been advocated to improve antimicrobial utilization, but program implementation is variable. Antimicrobial stewardship programs (ASPs) have been advocated to improve antimicrobial utilization, but program implementation is variable.ObjectiveTo determine associations between ASPs and facility characteristics, and inpatient antimicrobial utilization measures in the Veterans Affairs (VA) system in 2012.DesignIn 2012, VA administered a survey on antimicrobial stewardship practices to designated ASP contacts at VA acute care hospitals. From the survey, we identified 34 variables across 3 domains (evidence, organizational context, and facilitation) that were assessed using multivariable least absolute shrinkage and selection operator regression against 4 antimicrobial utilization measures from 2012: aggregate acute care antimicrobial use, antimicrobial use in patients with non-infectious primary discharge diagnoses, missed opportunities to convert from parenteral to oral antimicrobial therapy, and double anaerobic coverage.SettingAll 130 VA facilities with acute care services.ResultsVariables associated with at least 3 favorable changes in antimicrobial utilization included presence of postgraduate physician/pharmacy training programs, number of antimicrobial-specific order sets, frequency of systematic de-escalation review, presence of pharmacists and/or infectious diseases (ID) attendings on acute care ward teams, and formal ID training of the lead ASP pharmacist. Variables associated with 2 unfavorable measures included bed size, the level of engagement with VA Antimicrobial Stewardship Task Force online resources, and utilization of antimicrobial stop orders.ConclusionsFormalization of ASP processes and presence of pharmacy and ID expertise are associated with favorable utilization. Systematic de-escalation review and order set establishment may be high-yield interventions. Journal of Hospital Medicine 2017;12:301-309.