Practice testing of generic quality indicators for responsible antibiotic use in nine hospitals in the Dutch–Belgian border area

BACKGROUND: Inpatient quality indicators (IQIs) were previously developed to assess responsible antibiotic use. AIM: Practice testing of these QIs in the hospital setting. METHOD: This study was performed within a Dutch-Belgian border network of hospitals implementing the Infection Risk Scan (IRIS) point prevalence survey (PPS) as part of the i-4-1-Health project. Twenty out of 51 DRIVE-AB IQIs, including 13 structure and seven process IQIs, were tested. Data on structure IQIs were obtained through a web-based questionnaire sent to the hospital medical microbiologists. PPS data from October to... Mehr ...

Verfasser: i-4-1-Health Study Group
Dokumenttyp: Artikel
Erscheinungsdatum: 2022
Schlagwörter: Antibiotic shortages / Antibiotic use / Antimicrobial stewardship / Point-prevalence survey / Quality indicator / Microbiology (medical) / Infectious Diseases / Journal Article
Sprache: Englisch
Permalink: https://search.fid-benelux.de/Record/base-28881051
Datenquelle: BASE; Originalkatalog
Powered By: BASE
Link(s) : https://dspace.library.uu.nl/handle/1874/446967

BACKGROUND: Inpatient quality indicators (IQIs) were previously developed to assess responsible antibiotic use. AIM: Practice testing of these QIs in the hospital setting. METHOD: This study was performed within a Dutch-Belgian border network of hospitals implementing the Infection Risk Scan (IRIS) point prevalence survey (PPS) as part of the i-4-1-Health project. Twenty out of 51 DRIVE-AB IQIs, including 13 structure and seven process IQIs, were tested. Data on structure IQIs were obtained through a web-based questionnaire sent to the hospital medical microbiologists. PPS data from October to December 2018 were used to calculate performance scores for the process QIs. FINDINGS: Nine hospitals participated. Regarding structure IQIs: the lowest performance scores were observed for recommendations for microbiological investigations in the guidelines and the use of an approval system for restricted antibiotics. In addition, most hospitals reported that some antibiotics were out of stock due to shortages. Regarding process IQIs: 697 systemic antibiotic prescriptions were used to calculate performance scores. The lowest score was observed for documentation of an antibiotic plan in the medical file (58.8%). Performance scores for IQIs on guideline compliance varied between 74.1% and 82.3% for different aspects of the antibiotic regimen (duration, choice, route, timing). CONCLUSION: This multicentre practice testing of IQIs identified improvement targets for stewardship efforts for both structure and process aspects of antibiotic care (approval system for restricted antibiotics, documentation of antibiotic plan). These results can guide the design of future PPS studies and a more extensive evaluation of the clinimetric properties of the IQIs.