New Study Identifies Successful Approaches to Antimicrobial Stewardship Programs in U.S. Hospitals

MartinaMartina Administrator admin
edited March 2018 in Quality Street

Misuse of antibiotics can lead to antibiotic resistance, accounting for more than two million infections and 23,000 deaths annually in the United States. To combat the threat of resistance to antibiotics, The Joint Commission has developed requirements for hospitals to have antimicrobial stewardship programs (ASPs).

As implementing ASPs remains a challenge for many hospitals, a new study in the February 2018 issue of The Joint Commission Journal on Quality and Patient Safety identifies common characteristics and innovative strategies among ASPs leading the way. In the article, “The Expanding Role of Antimicrobial Stewardship Programs in Hospitals in the United States: Lessons Learned from a Multisite Qualitative Study,” Shashi N. Kapadia, MD, instructor in medicine and in healthcare policy and research, Weill Cornell Medicine, New York City, and co-authors, report on findings from the interviews they conducted with 12 program leaders at four prominent ASPs in the United States.

The interview questions focused on ASP implementation, program structure, strengths and weaknesses, lessons learned and future directions. The authors identified three major themes that emerged from the data for successful approaches to ASPs:
1. Evolution from a top-down structure to a more diffuse approach involving unit-based pharmacists, multidisciplinary staff and shared responsibility for antimicrobial prescribing under the ASPs’ leadership.
2. Integration of information technology systems to enable real-time interventions to optimize antimicrobial therapy and patient management.
3. Barriers to technology integration including limited resources for data analysis and poor interoperability between software systems.

Read more: https://www.jointcommission.org/new_study_identifies_successful_approaches_to_antimicrobial_stewardship_programs_in_us_hospitals/

Sign In or Register to comment.