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Description of antibiotic stewardship expertise and activities among US public health departments, 2022

Background: In 2021, the CDC awarded >$100 million to 62 state, local, and territorial health departments (SLTHDs) to expand antibiotic stewardship expertise and implement antibiotic stewardship activities in different healthcare settings. Our objective was to describe SLTHD antibiotic stewardshi...

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Autores principales: Bizune, Destani, Luciano, Angelina, Neuhauser, Melinda, Hicks, Lauri, Kabbani, Sarah
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Cambridge University Press 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10594118/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/ash.2023.211
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author Bizune, Destani
Luciano, Angelina
Neuhauser, Melinda
Hicks, Lauri
Kabbani, Sarah
author_facet Bizune, Destani
Luciano, Angelina
Neuhauser, Melinda
Hicks, Lauri
Kabbani, Sarah
author_sort Bizune, Destani
collection PubMed
description Background: In 2021, the CDC awarded >$100 million to 62 state, local, and territorial health departments (SLTHDs) to expand antibiotic stewardship expertise and implement antibiotic stewardship activities in different healthcare settings. Our objective was to describe SLTHD antibiotic stewardship personnel and activities to characterize the impact of the funding. Methods: SLTHDs submitted performance measures, including quantitative and qualitative responses, describing personnel supporting antibiotic stewardship activities, types of activities, and healthcare facilities and professionals engaged from January through June 2022. A quantitative analysis of performance measures and qualitative thematic analysis of select narrative responses are reported. Results: Most SLTHDs (58 of 62, 94%) submitted performance measures. Among them, 37 (64%) reported identifying an antibiotic stewardship leader or coleader; most were pharmacists (57%) or physicians (38%) with infectious diseases training (68%) (Table 1). Of the remaining STLHDs, 20 reported barriers to identifying a leader or coleader, including hiring process delays and programmatic barriers (Table 2). SLTHDs reported 254 antibiotic stewardship activities; most reported activities involving multiple activity types (44%). Education and communication (eg, providing stewardship expertise) was the most common single activity (30%), followed by antibiotic use tracking and reporting (13%), assessment of antibiotic stewardship implementation (8%), and action and implementation (eg, audit and feedback letters) (4%). The highest number of activities were implemented in multiple healthcare settings (35%), followed by acute care (21%), outpatient (18%), long-term care (17%), and other (9%) (Fig. 1). SLTHDs reported engaging 4,970 healthcare facilities and 15,194 healthcare professionals in antibiotic stewardship activities across healthcare settings, to date, as part of this funding opportunity (Fig. 2). Conclusions: Antibiotic stewardship funding to SLTHDs allowed for increases in capacity and expanded outreach to implement a variety of antibiotic stewardship activities across multiple healthcare settings. Sustaining STLHD antibiotic stewardship activities can help increase engagement and coordination with healthcare facilities, healthcare professionals, and other partners to optimize antibiotic prescribing and patient safety. Disclosure: None
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spelling pubmed-105941182023-10-25 Description of antibiotic stewardship expertise and activities among US public health departments, 2022 Bizune, Destani Luciano, Angelina Neuhauser, Melinda Hicks, Lauri Kabbani, Sarah Antimicrob Steward Healthc Epidemiol Antibiotic Stewardship Background: In 2021, the CDC awarded >$100 million to 62 state, local, and territorial health departments (SLTHDs) to expand antibiotic stewardship expertise and implement antibiotic stewardship activities in different healthcare settings. Our objective was to describe SLTHD antibiotic stewardship personnel and activities to characterize the impact of the funding. Methods: SLTHDs submitted performance measures, including quantitative and qualitative responses, describing personnel supporting antibiotic stewardship activities, types of activities, and healthcare facilities and professionals engaged from January through June 2022. A quantitative analysis of performance measures and qualitative thematic analysis of select narrative responses are reported. Results: Most SLTHDs (58 of 62, 94%) submitted performance measures. Among them, 37 (64%) reported identifying an antibiotic stewardship leader or coleader; most were pharmacists (57%) or physicians (38%) with infectious diseases training (68%) (Table 1). Of the remaining STLHDs, 20 reported barriers to identifying a leader or coleader, including hiring process delays and programmatic barriers (Table 2). SLTHDs reported 254 antibiotic stewardship activities; most reported activities involving multiple activity types (44%). Education and communication (eg, providing stewardship expertise) was the most common single activity (30%), followed by antibiotic use tracking and reporting (13%), assessment of antibiotic stewardship implementation (8%), and action and implementation (eg, audit and feedback letters) (4%). The highest number of activities were implemented in multiple healthcare settings (35%), followed by acute care (21%), outpatient (18%), long-term care (17%), and other (9%) (Fig. 1). SLTHDs reported engaging 4,970 healthcare facilities and 15,194 healthcare professionals in antibiotic stewardship activities across healthcare settings, to date, as part of this funding opportunity (Fig. 2). Conclusions: Antibiotic stewardship funding to SLTHDs allowed for increases in capacity and expanded outreach to implement a variety of antibiotic stewardship activities across multiple healthcare settings. Sustaining STLHD antibiotic stewardship activities can help increase engagement and coordination with healthcare facilities, healthcare professionals, and other partners to optimize antibiotic prescribing and patient safety. Disclosure: None Cambridge University Press 2023-09-29 /pmc/articles/PMC10594118/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/ash.2023.211 Text en © The Society for Healthcare Epidemiology of America 2023 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Antibiotic Stewardship
Bizune, Destani
Luciano, Angelina
Neuhauser, Melinda
Hicks, Lauri
Kabbani, Sarah
Description of antibiotic stewardship expertise and activities among US public health departments, 2022
title Description of antibiotic stewardship expertise and activities among US public health departments, 2022
title_full Description of antibiotic stewardship expertise and activities among US public health departments, 2022
title_fullStr Description of antibiotic stewardship expertise and activities among US public health departments, 2022
title_full_unstemmed Description of antibiotic stewardship expertise and activities among US public health departments, 2022
title_short Description of antibiotic stewardship expertise and activities among US public health departments, 2022
title_sort description of antibiotic stewardship expertise and activities among us public health departments, 2022
topic Antibiotic Stewardship
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10594118/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/ash.2023.211
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