• J Pharm Pract · Apr 2013

    Emergency pharmacist impact on health care-associated pneumonia empiric therapy.

    • Sean R DeFrates, Kyle A Weant, Jason P Seamon, Alicia Shirakbari, and Stephanie N Baker.
    • Department of Pharmacy Services, The University of Kentucky HealthCare, Lexington, KY 40536, USA. sdefrates15@gmail.com
    • J Pharm Pract. 2013 Apr 1; 26 (2): 125-30.

    PurposeHealth care-associated pneumonia (HCAP) is a serious infection dependent on proper treatment that often presents in the emergency department (ED) and deviation from treatment guidelines appears to be high. This study was conducted to evaluate the impact of emergency medicine pharmacists (EPhs) on adherence of empiric antibiotic therapy to guideline recommendations.MethodsA retrospective chart review of adult patients with HCAP who presented to an academic medical center ED from September 1, 2008 to June 30, 2010 was conducted. The control group included those patients with HCAP who presented to the ED outside of the EPhs' hours (23:00-13:00), and the treatment group consisted of those patients who presented during the EPhs' hours (13:00-23:00).ResultsThe 81 patients presenting inside the EPhs' hours were significantly more likely to receive guideline adherent empiric antibiotics than the 70 patients presenting outside the EPhs' hours (49.38% vs 25.7%, P = .005). Also, patients in the treatment group received antibiotics in a shorter amount of time (11.37 vs 15.56 hours, P = .272) and at more appropriate doses (85.2% vs 77.1%, P = .29) although these outcomes were not statistically significant.ConclusionThe presence of the EPh significantly increased the likelihood of at-risk patients receiving empiric antimicrobial therapy consistent with guideline recommendations.

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