Literature DB >> 21737222

Improving door-to-antibiotic time in severely septic emergency department patients.

Eveline A Hitti1, John J Lewin, Jose Lopez, Jonathan Hansen, Michael Pipkin, Taha Itani, Paul Gurny.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: The Surviving Sepsis Campaign (SSC) guidelines recommend that broad-spectrum antibiotics be administered to severely septic patients within 3 h of emergency department (ED) admission. Despite the well-established evidence regarding the benefit of timely antibiotics, adoption of the SSC recommendation into daily clinical practice has been slow and sporadic. STUDY
OBJECTIVE: To study the impact of storing broad-spectrum antibiotics in an ED automated dispensing cabinet (ADC) on the timeliness of antibiotic administration in severely septic patients presenting to the ED.
METHODS: Retrospective observational study of timeliness of antibiotic administration in severely septic patients presenting to a community ED before and after adding broad-spectrum antibiotics to the ED ADC. Data on 56 patients before and 54 patients after the intervention were analyzed. The primary outcome measure was mean order-to-antibiotic time. Secondary outcome measures included mean door-to-antibiotic time and percentage of patients receiving antibiotics within 3 h.
RESULTS: The final analysis was on 110 patients. Order-to-antibiotic administration time was reduced by 29 min post-intervention (55 min vs. 26 min, 95% confidence interval [CI] 12.5-45.19). Mean door-to-antibiotic time was also reduced by 70 min (167 min vs. 97 min, 95% CI 37.53-102.29). The percentage of severely septic patients receiving antibiotics within 3h of arrival to the ED increased from 65% pre-intervention to 93% post-intervention (95% CI 0.12-0.42).
CONCLUSION: Storing key antibiotics in an institution's severe sepsis antibiogram in the ED ADC can significantly reduce order-to-antibiotic times and increase the percentage of patients receiving antibiotics within the recommended 3 h of ED arrival.
Copyright © 2012 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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Year:  2011        PMID: 21737222     DOI: 10.1016/j.jemermed.2011.05.015

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Emerg Med        ISSN: 0736-4679            Impact factor:   1.484


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