Empiric management of community-acquired pneumonia in Australian emergency departments


Autoria(s): Maxwell, D. J.; McIntosh, K. A.; Pulver, L. K.; Easton, K. L.; CAPTION Study Grp; Tett, S. E.
Contribuinte(s)

M. Van Der Weyden

Data(s)

01/01/2005

Resumo

Objective: To describe empiric community-acquired pneumonia (CAP) management in Australian hospital emergency departments (EDs) and evaluate this against national guidelines, including use of the pneumonia severity index and antibiotic selection. Design: A multicentre, cross-sectional, retrospective audit, April 2003 to February 2005. Setting: 37 Australian hospitals: 22 principal referral hospitals, six large major city hospitals, four large regional hospitals, four medium hospitals and one private hospital. Participants: Adult patients with a diagnosis of CAP made in the ED. Data on 20 consecutive CAP ED presentations were collected in participating hospitals. Outcome measures: Documented use of the pneumonia severity index, initial antibiotic therapy prescribed in the ED, average length of stay, inpatient mortality, and concordance with national guidelines. Results: 691 CAP presentations were included. Pneumonia severity index use was documented in 5% of cases. Antibiotic therapy covering common bacterial causes of CAP was prescribed in 67% of presentations, although overall concordance with national guidelines was 18%. Antibiotic prescribing was discordant due to inadequate empiric antimicrobial cover, allergy status (including contraindication to penicillin), inappropriate route of administration and/or inappropriate antibiotic choice according to recommendations. There was no significant difference between concordant and discordant antibiotic prescribing episodes in average length of stay (5.0 v 5.7 days; P=0.22) or inpatient mortality (1.6% v 4.1%; chi(2) = 1.82; P=0.18). Conclusions: Antibiotic therapy for CAP prescribed in Australian EDs varied. Concordance with national CAP guidelines was generally low. Targeted interventions are required to improve concordance.

Identificador

http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:76839

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

Australasian Medical Publishing Company

Palavras-Chave #Medicine, General & Internal #Guidelines #Therapy #Macrolides #Hospitals #Severity #Outcomes #Adults #Part #C1 #320503 Clinical Pharmacology and Therapeutics #730110 Respiratory system and diseases (incl. asthma)
Tipo

Journal Article