Cargando…

Trends of Antibiotic Use and Expenditure After an Intensified Antimicrobial Stewardship Policy at a 2,200-Bed Teaching Hospital in China

Objective: This study aimed to evaluate the effects of intensified Chinese special rectification activity on clinical antibiotic use (CSRA) policy on a tertiary-care teaching hospital. Methods: A 48-month longitudinal dataset involving inpatients, outpatients, and emergency patients were collected....

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Qian, Xiaodan, Pan, Yuyan, Su, Dan, Gong, Jinhong, Xu, Shan, Lin, Ying, Li, Xin
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Media S.A. 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8490695/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34621721
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpubh.2021.729778
_version_ 1784578570326114304
author Qian, Xiaodan
Pan, Yuyan
Su, Dan
Gong, Jinhong
Xu, Shan
Lin, Ying
Li, Xin
author_facet Qian, Xiaodan
Pan, Yuyan
Su, Dan
Gong, Jinhong
Xu, Shan
Lin, Ying
Li, Xin
author_sort Qian, Xiaodan
collection PubMed
description Objective: This study aimed to evaluate the effects of intensified Chinese special rectification activity on clinical antibiotic use (CSRA) policy on a tertiary-care teaching hospital. Methods: A 48-month longitudinal dataset involving inpatients, outpatients, and emergency patients were collected. Study period included pre-intervention stage (adopting soft measures like systemic training) and post-intervention stage (applying antibiotic control system to intensify CSRA policy). Antibiotic use was evaluated by antibiotic use rate (AUR) or antibiotic use density (AUD). Economic indicator was evaluated by antibiotic cost in prescription or antibiotic expenditure in hospitalization. Data was analyzed by interrupted time series (ITS) analysis. Results: The medical quality indicators remained stable or improved during the study period. AUR of inpatients (AURI) declined 0.553% per month (P = 0.025) before the intervention and declined 0.354% per month (P = 0.471) after the intensified CSRA policy was implemented. AUD, expressed as defined daily doses per 100 patients per day (DDDs/100PD), decreased by 1.102 DDDs/100PD per month (P = 0.021) before and decreased by 0.597 DDDs/100PD per month (P = 0.323) thereafter. The ratio of antibiotic expenditure to medication expenditure (AE/ME) decreased by 0.510% per month (P = 0.000) before and fell by 0.096% (P = 0.000) per month thereafter. AE per patient decreased by 25.309 yuan per month (P = 0.002) before and decreased by 7.987 yuan per month (P = 0.053) thereafter. AUR of outpatient (AURO) decreased by 0.065% per month before (P = 0.550) and decreased by 0.066% per month (P = 0.994) thereafter. The ratio of antibiotic cost to prescription cost in outpatient (ACO/PCO) decreased by 0.182% per month (P = 0.506) before and decreased by 0.216% per month (P = 0.906) thereafter. AUR of emergency patient (AURE) decreased by 0.400% per month (P = 0.044) before and decreased by 0.092% per month (P = 0.164) thereafter. The ratio of antibiotic cost to prescription cost in emergency patient (ACE/PCE) decreased by 0.616% per month (P < 0.001) before and decreased by 0.151% per month (P < 0.001) thereafter. Conclusions: Implementation of CSRA policy was associated with declining antibiotic use and antibiotic expenditure in inpatients, outpatients, and emergency patients. However, it is also important to note that the declining trend of antibiotic consumption slowed due to the limited capacity for decline in the later stages of CSRA intervention.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-8490695
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2021
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-84906952021-10-06 Trends of Antibiotic Use and Expenditure After an Intensified Antimicrobial Stewardship Policy at a 2,200-Bed Teaching Hospital in China Qian, Xiaodan Pan, Yuyan Su, Dan Gong, Jinhong Xu, Shan Lin, Ying Li, Xin Front Public Health Public Health Objective: This study aimed to evaluate the effects of intensified Chinese special rectification activity on clinical antibiotic use (CSRA) policy on a tertiary-care teaching hospital. Methods: A 48-month longitudinal dataset involving inpatients, outpatients, and emergency patients were collected. Study period included pre-intervention stage (adopting soft measures like systemic training) and post-intervention stage (applying antibiotic control system to intensify CSRA policy). Antibiotic use was evaluated by antibiotic use rate (AUR) or antibiotic use density (AUD). Economic indicator was evaluated by antibiotic cost in prescription or antibiotic expenditure in hospitalization. Data was analyzed by interrupted time series (ITS) analysis. Results: The medical quality indicators remained stable or improved during the study period. AUR of inpatients (AURI) declined 0.553% per month (P = 0.025) before the intervention and declined 0.354% per month (P = 0.471) after the intensified CSRA policy was implemented. AUD, expressed as defined daily doses per 100 patients per day (DDDs/100PD), decreased by 1.102 DDDs/100PD per month (P = 0.021) before and decreased by 0.597 DDDs/100PD per month (P = 0.323) thereafter. The ratio of antibiotic expenditure to medication expenditure (AE/ME) decreased by 0.510% per month (P = 0.000) before and fell by 0.096% (P = 0.000) per month thereafter. AE per patient decreased by 25.309 yuan per month (P = 0.002) before and decreased by 7.987 yuan per month (P = 0.053) thereafter. AUR of outpatient (AURO) decreased by 0.065% per month before (P = 0.550) and decreased by 0.066% per month (P = 0.994) thereafter. The ratio of antibiotic cost to prescription cost in outpatient (ACO/PCO) decreased by 0.182% per month (P = 0.506) before and decreased by 0.216% per month (P = 0.906) thereafter. AUR of emergency patient (AURE) decreased by 0.400% per month (P = 0.044) before and decreased by 0.092% per month (P = 0.164) thereafter. The ratio of antibiotic cost to prescription cost in emergency patient (ACE/PCE) decreased by 0.616% per month (P < 0.001) before and decreased by 0.151% per month (P < 0.001) thereafter. Conclusions: Implementation of CSRA policy was associated with declining antibiotic use and antibiotic expenditure in inpatients, outpatients, and emergency patients. However, it is also important to note that the declining trend of antibiotic consumption slowed due to the limited capacity for decline in the later stages of CSRA intervention. Frontiers Media S.A. 2021-09-21 /pmc/articles/PMC8490695/ /pubmed/34621721 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpubh.2021.729778 Text en Copyright © 2021 Qian, Pan, Su, Gong, Xu, Lin and Li. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
spellingShingle Public Health
Qian, Xiaodan
Pan, Yuyan
Su, Dan
Gong, Jinhong
Xu, Shan
Lin, Ying
Li, Xin
Trends of Antibiotic Use and Expenditure After an Intensified Antimicrobial Stewardship Policy at a 2,200-Bed Teaching Hospital in China
title Trends of Antibiotic Use and Expenditure After an Intensified Antimicrobial Stewardship Policy at a 2,200-Bed Teaching Hospital in China
title_full Trends of Antibiotic Use and Expenditure After an Intensified Antimicrobial Stewardship Policy at a 2,200-Bed Teaching Hospital in China
title_fullStr Trends of Antibiotic Use and Expenditure After an Intensified Antimicrobial Stewardship Policy at a 2,200-Bed Teaching Hospital in China
title_full_unstemmed Trends of Antibiotic Use and Expenditure After an Intensified Antimicrobial Stewardship Policy at a 2,200-Bed Teaching Hospital in China
title_short Trends of Antibiotic Use and Expenditure After an Intensified Antimicrobial Stewardship Policy at a 2,200-Bed Teaching Hospital in China
title_sort trends of antibiotic use and expenditure after an intensified antimicrobial stewardship policy at a 2,200-bed teaching hospital in china
topic Public Health
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8490695/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34621721
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpubh.2021.729778
work_keys_str_mv AT qianxiaodan trendsofantibioticuseandexpenditureafteranintensifiedantimicrobialstewardshippolicyata2200bedteachinghospitalinchina
AT panyuyan trendsofantibioticuseandexpenditureafteranintensifiedantimicrobialstewardshippolicyata2200bedteachinghospitalinchina
AT sudan trendsofantibioticuseandexpenditureafteranintensifiedantimicrobialstewardshippolicyata2200bedteachinghospitalinchina
AT gongjinhong trendsofantibioticuseandexpenditureafteranintensifiedantimicrobialstewardshippolicyata2200bedteachinghospitalinchina
AT xushan trendsofantibioticuseandexpenditureafteranintensifiedantimicrobialstewardshippolicyata2200bedteachinghospitalinchina
AT linying trendsofantibioticuseandexpenditureafteranintensifiedantimicrobialstewardshippolicyata2200bedteachinghospitalinchina
AT lixin trendsofantibioticuseandexpenditureafteranintensifiedantimicrobialstewardshippolicyata2200bedteachinghospitalinchina