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Addressing Antibiotic Use in Nursing Homes – It Starts with a Conversation

Categories: Antibiotic use, Long Term Care (LTC)

Nimalie Stone, MD

Nimalie Stone, MD

Author – Nimalie Stone MD,
Division of Healthcare Quality Promotion, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

As you have read in the posts from our academic and clinical partners, much work needs to be done to impact the systems and behaviors driving antibiotic use in the nursing home setting.

We believe many of the principles of antibiotic stewardship we apply in hospitals would also hold true in other healthcare settings. However, we do not have the same levels of clinical experience and research evidence to implement this activity in our nation’s nursing homes. As an important first step in developing a strategy to promote improved antibiotic use in these healthcare facilities, CDC has reached out to key partners across the nursing home industry to get their input and advice. In fact, today CDC is having face-to-face conversations with these industry stakeholders to discuss and outline next steps towards improved antibiotic use in nursing homes.

Inappropriate Antibiotic Use in Nursing Homes: A Systems Problem

Categories: Antimicrobial Resistance, Healthcare-associated infections

Chris Crnich, MD

Chris Crnich, MD

Author – Chris Crnich, MD
Assistant Professor of Medicine in the Division of Infectious Diseases at the University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health and is the Hospital Epidemiologist at the William S. Middleton VA Hospital.

A significant proportion of antibiotic use in nursing homes is inappropriate. Inappropriate antibiotic use unnecessarily places residents at risk for adverse drug events and is the major driver of antibiotic resistance in nursing homes.

A traditional approach to the problem of inappropriate antibiotic use in nursing homes centers on educating the provider making prescribing decisions. The thinking goes, that if we can get providers to better understand the adverse consequences of antibiotics and increase their knowledge about antibiotic choice and dosing, the problem of inappropriate antibiotic use in nursing homes will go away. Unfortunately, it is not that simple.

Prescribing in nursing homes is unique in that most decisions to initiate antibiotics are made over the phone without the benefit of a clinical exam performed by the prescribing provider. Coupled with the clinical uncertainty created by the atypical presentation of acute illness in the frail elderly and limited access to diagnostic test results creates a perfect environment for overuse of antibiotics. When viewed through this prism, the likelihood of inappropriate antibiotic use is not simply determined by the provider but by the particulars of the resident’s presentation, accessibility to diagnostic tests, features of the nursing home staff primarily responsible for the clinical exam, as well as the quality of communication between providers and facility staff.
Recognizing that inappropriate antibiotic use is an outcome determined more by the nursing home system rather than an individual provider’s decisions and behaviors is an important step towards addressing this problem. With this in mind, future efforts to improve antibiotic use in nursing homes must begin to focus on strategies that: 1) standardize nursing assessments of the resident with suspected infection; 2) enhance the accessibility of clinical information and diagnostic test results, and 3) improve the quality of communication between providers involved in the antibiotic start process.

Implementing these types of interventions in the nursing home environment will not be without challenge but as Albert Einstein once said, “Insanity is doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results”. Ignoring the important role of the system on antibiotic use will lead to more of the same. We can and must do better.

Cost of Antibiotic Misuse Too Great to Ignore

Categories: Antimicrobial Resistance

The Society for Healthcare Epidemiology of America (SHEA)

The Society for Healthcare Epidemiology of America (SHEA)

Author - Sara Cosgrove, MD, MS,
Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine

Medical and scientific advances change the way we look at the world. Before penicillin was introduced in 1942, any infection could be a death sentence. Since then, we have been in awe of and dependent on the use of antibiotics as one of the most valuable tools in our medical toolbox. But society as a whole has taken these drugs for granted with use that has allowed the issue of drug resistant infections to creep up on us and grow to be a serious public health threat. Correcting this misuse of antibiotics in our healthcare facilities is necessary to help preserve these drugs; the cost of inaction is too great to be ignored.

One strategy to preserve the use of the antibiotics currently available and reign in resistance is antimicrobial stewardship. These programs and interventions help prescribers know the right drug, at the right time, in the right dose, for the right duration. These programs help to improve the use of antibiotics.

Antimicrobial resistance is becoming an increasing issue in healthcare facilities and communities throughout the country, as evidenced by outbreaks of MRSA and carbapenem-resistant Enterobacteriaceae (CRE). These resistant bugs are associated with increased patient morbidity, mortality and higher healthcare costs spent on useless use of antibiotics and longer, more intense hospital stays.

Preserving Lifesaving Antibiotics Today and for the Future

Categories: Antimicrobial Resistance

Carlos Don, victim of an antibiotic-resistant infection, methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus, which took his life days before his 13th birthday

Carlos Don, victim of an antibiotic-resistant infection, methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus, which took his life days before his 13th birthday

Author – David A. Relman, MD, FIDSA
IDSA President

Carlos Don was a healthy, active, and spirited sixth grader who loved playing football and never let anything slow him down. In 2007, an antibiotic-resistant infection, methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus, took his life just days before his 13th birthday.

Sadly, this is just one of many tragedies caused by the alarming rise in drug-resistant infections and the lack of new antibiotics in the development pipeline. Using antibiotics appropriately—at home, in the doctor’s office, at the pharmacy, in the hospital, and on the farm—is a crucial part of addressing this public health crisis. Antibiotics can save lives when used wisely, but misusing them can do more harm than good, from serious allergic reactions to hastening the development of resistance.

This week, as we mark “Get Smart About Antibiotics Week,” the Infectious Diseases Society of America (IDSA) is joining with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and other national health organizations to commit to principles, including antibiotic stewardship, to both conserve and replenish our antibiotic resources. It’s part of IDSA’s ongoing effort to find solutions to this crisis, which requires a multipronged approach.

Another key element of this effort is to provide incentives that encourage research and development of new antibiotics, such as new approval pathways to streamline the development of antibiotics needed to treat the most serious bacterial infections. In addition, doctors and their patients sorely need more advanced rapid diagnostic tools to unmask infections more quickly and accurately. Finally, stronger public health measures, including surveillance, data collection, and immunization, and related research are also in order.

It will take all of us working together to ensure a future where the lives of patients like Carlos are not cut short by antibiotic-resistant infections and we have the antibiotics and diagnostics we need to prevent such tragedies. Getting smarter about antibiotic use is a critical step on this path.

Visit www.AntibioticsNow.org to learn more about Carlos, others who have been affected by antibiotic-resistant infections, and IDSA’s efforts.

“Drivers” of appropriate antibiotic use in the inpatient setting: Exploring Practical Approaches

Categories: Antimicrobial Resistance

Driver Diagram

Click on image for larger view

Authors:  Diane Jacobsen MPH, CPHQ, Director, Institute for Healthcare Improvement
Don Goldmann MD, Vice President, Institute for Healthcare Improvement

Did you ever wonder why a practical change idea can be more than a simple challenge?   For example, how do you get the right antibiotic to the right patient for the right amount of time?

In 2009, The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and the Institute for Healthcare Improvement (IHI) invited experts to create a set of key changes for appropriate and timely antibiotic use for patients cared for in the hospital.  We created a Driver Diagram as a way of organizing our theories of what it would take to bring about change.  We also organized the change ideas in an easy to use guide called a change package and developed a measurement framework. Drivers and changes were chosen to reflect the causal pathway towards appropriate antibiotic utilization and reduction of adverse drug events, antibiotic-associated colitis, cost of care, and antibiotic resistance. We wanted to make it practical and easy for hospitals to test and deploy at the front line.

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