Effect of a multifaceted intervention on number of antimicrobial prescriptions for suspected urinary tract infections in residents of nursing homes:Cluster randomised controlled trial


Autoria(s): Loeb, M.; Smith, S.; Brazil, K.; Lohfeld, L.; Liu, X.; Walter, S.D.; McGeer, A.; Simor, A.; Stevenson, K.; Zoutman, D.
Data(s)

24/09/2005

Resumo

Objective: To assess whether a multifaceted intervention can reduce the number of prescriptions for antimicrobials for suspected urinary tract infections in residents of nursing homes. Design: Cluster randomised controlled trial. Setting: 24 nursing homes in Ontario, Canada, and Idaho, United States. Participants: 12 nursing homes allocated to a multifaceted intervention and 12 allocated to usual care. Outcomes were measured in 4217 residents. Interventions: Diagnostic and treatment algorithm for urinary tract infections implemented at the nursing home level using a multifaceted approach-small group interactive sessions for nurses, videotapes, written material, outreach visits, and one on one interviews with physicians. Main outcome measures: Number of antimicrobials prescribed for suspected urinary tract infections, total use of antimicrobials, admissions to hospital, and deaths. Results: Fewer courses of antimicrobials for suspected urinary tract infections per 1000 resident days were prescribed in the intervention nursing homes than in the usual care homes (1.17 v 1.59 courses; weighted mean difference -0.49, 95% confidence intervals -0.93 to -0.06). Antimicrobials for suspected urinary tract infection represented 28.4% of all courses of drugs prescribed in the intervention nursing homes compared with 38.6% prescribed in the usual care homes (weighted mean difference -9.6%, -16.9% to -2.4%). The difference in total antimicrobial use per 1000 resident days between intervention and usual care groups was not significantly different (3.52 v 3.93; weighed mean difference -0.37, -1.17 to 0.44). No significant difference was found in admissions to hospital or mortality between the study arms. Conclusion: A multifaceted intervention using algorithms can reduce the number of antimicrobial prescriptions for suspected urinary tract infections in residents of nursing homes.

Identificador

http://pure.qub.ac.uk/portal/en/publications/effect-of-a-multifaceted-intervention-on-number-of-antimicrobial-prescriptions-for-suspected-urinary-tract-infections-in-residents-of-nursing-homes(6a5b601a-cbd4-4932-8b9b-8f98799fdbf0).html

http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmj.38602.586343.55

http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?partnerID=yv4JPVwI&eid=2-s2.0-25144516708&md5=37408c69ab99dc4a4f42737e31c137d4

Idioma(s)

eng

Direitos

info:eu-repo/semantics/restrictedAccess

Fonte

Loeb , M , Smith , S , Brazil , K , Lohfeld , L , Liu , X , Walter , S D , McGeer , A , Simor , A , Stevenson , K & Zoutman , D 2005 , ' Effect of a multifaceted intervention on number of antimicrobial prescriptions for suspected urinary tract infections in residents of nursing homes : Cluster randomised controlled trial ' British Medical Journal , vol 331 , no. 7518 , pp. 669-672 . DOI: 10.1136/bmj.38602.586343.55

Tipo

article