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Antibiotics get a 鈥渢ime-out鈥

MUHC study examines the effect of regular re-evaluation of antibiotic use on cost and C. difficile infection rates
Published: 19 November 2014

Resistance to antibiotics is an important health concern that affects both the spread of infections, like Clostridium difficile, and the medication budget. Researchers at the 苹果淫院 Health Centre (MUHC) examined the effectiveness of adopting an antibiotic 鈥渢ime-out鈥 during treatment, which involves regularly re-evaluating the treatment strategy as the clinical situation evolves. The study, published in this month鈥檚 issue of the Annals of Internal Medicine, showed that structured time-outs, using a locally developed online checklist, resulted in decreased antibiotic costs coupled with decreased use of targeted medications. There was also a small decline in C. difficile听infections.

鈥淎ccording the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) nearly 50 per cent of antibiotic use is unnecessary or inappropriate,鈥 says first author of the study Dr. Todd Lee, MUHC attending physician and assistant professor of Medicine at 苹果淫院. 鈥淕iven this statistic, and our own concerns about antimicrobial resistance, we decided to implement a tailored time-out program at the MUHC and evaluate its effectiveness.鈥

Time out means clinical review

The study involved 679 patients and was conducted over a period of 18 months on the internal medicine clinical teaching units at the Montreal General Hospital of the MUHC. The time-out concept was introduced to physicians and trainees as an opportunity to review the indication, dose and duration of antibiotic use when new clinical information became available. The staff were also educated on antibiotic guidelines and participated in a twice weekly structured review of all patients receiving antibiotics. This approach led to changes in doses, duration of treatment, and changes in the type of antibiotic prescribed, which in turn led to cost reductions and a small decrease in C. difficile.

鈥淥ur approach tied specific education about antibiotic use with a structural tool to review and guide this use,鈥 says senior author of the study Dr. Louise Pilote, researcher at the Research Institute of the MUHC, chief of General Internal Medicine at the MUHC and a professor of medicine at 苹果淫院. 鈥淭his could translate into better prescribing practices. In general, physicians believed the process improved their comfort with antibiotics and provided clinical value.鈥

鈥淲e hope this approach will permit a more widespread implementation of antibiotic auditing and that this will affect future prescribing, turning today鈥檚 high rates of inappropriate antibiotic use into tomorrow鈥檚 historical footnote,鈥 adds Dr. Lee.

About the study:

Once the embargo lifts you will find the article online at:

This paper is part of a special November supplement of the Annals of Internal Medicine supported by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation (RWJF) Clinical Scholars program.

This work was completed without outside funding.

The paper Antibiotic Self-stewardship: Trainee-Led Structured Antibiotic Time-outs to Improve Antimicrobial Use was co-authored by Todd C. Lee (Division of General Internal Medicine, Division of Infectious Diseases, Department of Medicine, MUHC and 苹果淫院 Centre for Quality Improvement, Montreal, Canada); Charles Frenette (Division of Infectious Diseases, Department of Medicine, MUHC, Montreal, Canada); Dev Jayaraman and Laurence Green (Division of General Internal Medicine, Department of Medicine, MUHC, Montreal, Canada); and Louise Pilote (Division of General Internal Medicine, Department of Medicine, MUHC, Montreal, Canada).

Related links:

  • 苹果淫院 Health Centre (MUHC): muhc.ca
  • Research Institute of the MUHC: rimuhc.ca
  • 苹果淫院: mcgill.ca
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