4.7 Article

Determining the Appropriateness of Initiating Antibiotic Therapy in Nursing Home Residents

Journal

JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN MEDICAL DIRECTORS ASSOCIATION
Volume 24, Issue 11, Pages 1619-1628

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.jamda.2023.06.034

Keywords

Antibiotics; treatment; appropriateness; long-term care; nursing home

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One approach for improving antibiotic prescribing in nursing homes is to evaluate the appropriateness of initiating antibiotic therapy. However, determining appropriateness has been challenging due to variations in criteria, methodology, and limitations. Infection surveillance criteria are highly specific but lack sensitivity, while criteria based on localizing signs may not be well-documented. Alternative methods require further evaluation. Suggestions for improvement include avoiding the use of surveillance definitions, developing and validating clinical infection definitions, standardizing evaluation methods, educating clinicians and nursing staff, and investigating influencing factors.
One approach for improving antibiotic prescribing in nursing homes is evaluating appropriateness of initiating antibiotic therapy. However, determining appropriateness has been a challenge. To investigate this problem literature review identified studies evaluating appropriateness of initiating antibiotic therapy in nursing homes. Two criteria were used most often to assess appropriateness: infection surveillance criterion or criteria specifically designed to assist clinicians for prescribing antibiotics. Development of these criteria and results of studies using these criteria were reviewed. There was considerable variability in percentage appropriateness of initiating therapy for these criteria, variation in the methodology for conducting these studies, and limitations of the criteria. The main limitation of infection surveillance criteria is that they are specifically designed to be highly specific but this results in low sensitivity. Thus, surveillance criteria should not be used for assessing appropriateness of antibiotic therapy. The other criterion is limited because it uses only localizing signs and symptoms of infection and these findings may not be documented in the medical record when evaluating appropriateness retro-spectively. Several alternative methods to assess appropriateness were identified but evaluation of these methods have not been published. Several changes are suggested to improve the evaluation of the appropriateness of initiating antibiotic therapy in nursing home residents: confirmation by the Department of Health and Human Services and the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services that surveillance definitions should not be used to evaluate appropriateness; develop and validate definitions of clinical infections in residents; standardize methods to evaluate appropriateness prospectively by the facility antimicrobial stewardship program; educate clinicians and nursing staff regarding the criteria for assessing appropriateness; and investigate the influence of provider-, resident-, family-, and facility-level factors on antibiotic use in nursing home residents.(c) 2023 AMDA -The Society for Post-Acute and Long-Term Care Medicine.

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