Antibiotic prescription practices and their relationship to outcome in South African intensive care units: findings of the prevalence of infection in South African Intensive Care Units (PISA) study

BACKGROUND. The emergence of multidrug-resistant, extensively resistant and pan-resistant pathogens and the widespread inappropriate use of antibiotics is a global catastrophe receiving increasing attention by health care authorities. The antibiotic prescription practices in public and private intensive care units (ICUs) in South Africa are unknown. OBJECTIVE. To document antibiotic prescription practices in public and private ICUs in South Africa and to determine their relationship to patient outcomes. METHODS. A national database of public and private ICUs in South Africa was prospectively studied using a proportional probability sampling technique. RESULTS. Two hundred and forty-eight patients were recruited. Therapeutic antibiotics were initiated in 182 (73.5%), and 54.9% received an inappropriate antibiotic initially. De-escalation was practised in 33.3% and 19.7% of the public and private sector patients, respectively. Antibiotic duration was inappropriate in most cases. An appropriate choice of antibiotic was associated with an 11% mortality, while an inappropriate choice was associated with a 27% mortality (p=0.01). The mortality associated with appropriate or inappropriate duration of antibiotics was 17.6% and 20.6%, respectively (p=0.42). CONCLUSION. Inappropriate antibiotic prescription practices in ICUs in the public and private sectors in South Africa are common and are also associated with poor patient outcomes.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Paruk,Fathima, Richards,Guy, Scribante,Juan, Bhagwanjee,Sats, Mer,Mervyn, Perrie,Helen
Format: Digital revista
Language:English
Published: South African Medical Association 2012
Online Access:http://www.scielo.org.za/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0256-95742012000700015
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