• Pediatrics · May 2013

    Comparative Study

    Quality improvement methods increase appropriate antibiotic prescribing for childhood pneumonia.

    • Lilliam Ambroggio, Joanna Thomson, Eileen Murtagh Kurowski, Joshua Courter, Angela Statile, Camille Graham, Brieanne Sheehan, Srikant Iyer, Samir S Shah, and Christine M White.
    • Division of Hospital Medicine, Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center, Cincinnati, OH, 45229, USA. lilliam.ambroggio@cchmc.org
    • Pediatrics. 2013 May 1;131(5):e1623-31.

    ObjectiveIn August 2011, the Pediatric Infectious Disease Society and Infectious Disease Society of America published an evidence-based guideline for the management of community-acquired pneumonia (CAP) in children ≥3 months. Our objective was to evaluate if quality improvement (QI) methods could improve appropriate antibiotic prescribing in a setting without a formal antimicrobial stewardship program.MethodsAt a tertiary children's hospital, QI methods were used to rapidly implement the Pediatric Infectious Disease Society/Infectious Disease Society of America guideline recommendations for appropriate first-line antibiotic therapy in children with CAP. QI interventions focused on 4 key drivers and were tested separately in the emergency department and on the hospital medicine resident teams, using multiple plan-do-study-act cycles. Medical records of eligible patients were reviewed weekly to determine the success of prescribing recommended antibiotic therapy. The impact of these interventions on our outcome was tracked over time on run charts.ResultsAppropriate first-line antibiotic prescribing for children admitted with the diagnosis of CAP increased in the emergency department from a median baseline of 0% to 100% and on the hospital medicine resident teams from 30% to 100% within 6 months of introducing the guidelines locally at Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center and has been sustained for 3 months.ConclusionsOur study demonstrates that QI methods can rapidly improve adherence to national guidelines even in settings without a formal antimicrobial stewardship program to encourage judicious antibiotic prescribing for CAP.

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