New Program Lowers Antibiotic Use and Improves Patient Safety in Long-Term Care Facilities
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April 2022
Overuse of antibiotics can lead to drug-resistant bacteria and harm to patients. This problem is particularly acute in long-term care settings (LTCs) such as nursing homes and assisted living facilities, where some 1.7 million older adults in the United States reside. To address these concerns, the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ) funded Johns Hopkins Medicine and NORC to design, implement, and assess the AHRQ Safety Program for Improving Antibiotic Use in Long Term Care. The implementation approach included 15 training webinars on how to establish and maintain a stewardship program, ways to improve teamwork and communication, best practices for diagnosing and managing common infectious syndromes, as well as access to experts in antimicrobial stewardship, infectious disease and implementation approaches, and several tools to promote stewardship activities.
They found that the vast majority of participating facilities—439 of 523—completed the year-long program, a surprisingly high number given LTCs’ limited resources and frequent staff turnover. Program completion led to significant decreases in the number of antibiotic treatment courses and urine cultures in these LTCs. Facilities that were more engaged in the webinars and other program activities had higher success rates.
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