Health & Medical First Aid & Hospitals & Surgery

Hospitalists Take Charge of Antibiotic Resistance

Hospitalists Take Charge of Antibiotic Resistance

Beyond the Bedside


Many physicians fail to consider the bigger societal implications when prescribing antibiotics for sick patients in their charge, because their responsibility is, first and foremost, to that individual. But, Dr. Srinivasan says, "good antibiotic stewardship is beneficial to the patient lying in the bed in front of you, because every day we are confronted with C. diff. infections, adverse drug events, all of these issues."

Strategies and processes help hospitalists make the best decision for their patients at the time they require care, while providing room for adaptation and the improvements that serve all patients.

Some institutions use interventions like prospective audit and feedback monitoring to help physicians become more responsible antibiotic prescribers, says Dr. Fishman, who worked with infectious disease specialists at the University of Pennsylvania in the early 1990s to develop a stewardship program there.

"In our institution, we see better outcomes—lower complications—usually associated with a decreased length of stay, at least in the ICU for critically ill patients—and increased cure rates," he says.

Stewardship efforts take investment on the part of the hospital. Dr. Fishman cited a recent study at the Children's Hospital of Pennsylvania that looked at whether a particular education strategy the hospital implemented actually led to improvements.

"It was successful in intervening in this problem [of inappropriate prescribing] in pediatricians, but it did take ongoing education of both healthcare providers and patients," he says, noting that large financial and time investments are necessary for the ongoing training and follow-up that is necessary.

And patients need to be educated, too.

"It takes a minute to write that prescription and probably 15 or 20 minutes not to write it," Dr. Fishman says. "We need to educate patients about potential complications of antibiotics use, as well as the signs and symptoms of infection."

The CDC report is a call to action for all healthcare providers to consider how they can become better antibiotic stewards. There are very few new antibiotics on the market and little in the pipeline. All providers must do what they can to preserve the antibiotics we currently have, Dr. Fishman says.

"There is opportunity, and I think hospitalists are up to the challenge," Dr. Flanders says. "They are doing lots of work to improve quality across lots of domains in their hospitals. I think this is an area where attention is deserved."



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