scholarly journals Point Prevalence Survey of Antimicrobial Utilization in Ghana’s Premier Hospital: Implications for Antimicrobial Stewardship

Antibiotics ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 10 (12) ◽  
pp. 1528
Author(s):  
Daniel Ankrah ◽  
Helena Owusu ◽  
Asiwome Aggor ◽  
Anthony Osei ◽  
Agneta Ampomah ◽  
...  

The first comprehensive point prevalence survey at the Korle Bu Teaching Hospital (KBTH) was performed as part of the 2019 Global Point Prevalence Survey (Global-PPS) on antimicrobials. The aim was to establish a PPS baseline for the whole hospital and to identify required stewardship interventions. The PPS was conducted over three days in June 2019 using the GLOBAL-PPS standardized method for surveillance of antimicrobial utilization in hospitals to evaluate antimicrobial prescribing. In all, 988 patients were admitted to 69 wards. Overall antimicrobial prevalence was 53.3%. More community-acquired infections (CAI) were treated empirically compared to health-care associated infections (94.0% vs. 86.1% respectively, p = 0.002). Main indications for prescribing antimicrobials were pneumonia (18.4%), skin and soft tissue infections (11.4%) and sepsis (11.1%). Among antimicrobials, systemic antibiotics accounted for 83.5%, of which amoxicillin with beta-lactam inhibitor (17.5%), metronidazole (11.8%) and ceftriaxone (11.5%) dominated. Guideline compliance was 89.0%. Stop/review dates were completed in 33.4% and documented reason was recorded in 53.0% of all prescriptions. If the findings in this PPS can be addressed antimicrobial stewardship at the KBTH stands to improve significantly.

2017 ◽  
Vol 8 (1) ◽  
pp. 42 ◽  
Author(s):  
OO Oduyebo ◽  
AT Olayinka ◽  
KC Iregbu ◽  
A Versporten ◽  
H Goossens ◽  
...  

Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document