Improving Antimicrobial Prescribing: A Multinomial Model Identifying Factors Associated With First- and Second-Line Prescribing: A Multinomial Model Identifying Factors Associated With First- and Second-Line Prescribing

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Abstract

Background objectives: Broad-spectrum, second-line antimicrobials may be prescribed when initial first-line options prove ineffective. This study compares prescribing practices and identifies potential influencing factors for first-and second-line antimicrobials in long-term care facilities.Design: Point prevalence survey of health care-associated infections and antimicrobial use in long-term care facilities (HALT), expanded by additional data collection.Setting: Long-term care facilities in Ireland.Participants: Of long-term care facilities that participated in the HALT study 2016, additional data provided by 77 facilities with a record of 3677 residents.Measurement: On the survey date, an institutional questionnaire was completed by each participating long-term care facility, and resident questionnaires were completed only for those residents who met a health care-associated infection surveillance definition and or were prescribed a systemic antimicrobial. All participating long-term care facilities were contacted at a later time point to provide limited anonymized data (age, sex, urinary catheterization, and disorientation) on all current residents. These additional data were matched to the original data set, facilitating multilevel multinominal logistic regression (first-line second-line no antimicrobial).Results: Of 3677 residents in 77 long-term care facilities, 381 (10%) were prescribed systemic antimicrobials on the survey day. Of those, 46% were categorized as second-line choices, with substantial interfacility variation observed with regard to prescription of first-versus second-line antimicrobials. The odds of a second-line antimicrobial prescription for a resident doubled when comparing the highest with the lowest prescribing long-term care facilities (median odds ratio = 2.0, credibility interval = 1.5-2.9). Male residents were less often prescribed first-line antimicrobials [odds ratio (OR) = 0.6, 95% confidence interval (CI) = 0.4-0.9, P = .02]. Long-term care facilities that reported the provision of education on antimicrobial prescribing use significantly less second-line antimicrobials (OR = 0.2, 95% CI = 0.1-0.7, P = .02). Females and residents with a urinary catheter were more likely to receive first-line antimicrobials.Conclusion Implications: The use of second-line antimicrobials is common practice in long-term care facilities, but education and training on appropriate antimicrobial use has the potential to reduce second-line antimicrobial prescribing, improve patients outcomes, and reduce antimicrobial resistance. (C) 2018 AMDA - The Society for Post-Acute and Long-Term Care Medicine.
Original languageEnglish (Ireland)
Pages (from-to)624-628
Number of pages4
JournalJournal of the American Medical Directors Association
Volume20
Issue number5
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 May 2019

Keywords

  • Antimicrobials
  • HALT
  • first-line
  • long-term care facilities
  • multinomial-multilevel
  • second-line

Authors (Note for portal: view the doc link for the full list of authors)

  • Authors
  • Tandan, M;Burns, K;Murphy, H;Hennessy, S;Cormican, M;Vellinga, A

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