Association between High-Risk Medication Usage and Healthcare Facility-Onset C. difficile Infection

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Abstract

OBJECTIVE National hospital performance measures for C. difficile infection (CD) are available; comparing antibacterial use among performance levels can aid in identifying effective antimicrobial stewardship strategies to reduce CDI rates. DESIGN Hospital-level, cross-sectional analysis. METHODS Hospital characteristics (ie, demographics, medications, patient mix) were obtained for 77 hospitals for 2013. Hospitals were assigned 1 of 3 levels of a CDI standardized infection ratio (SIR): 'Worse than,' 'Better than,' or 'No different than' a national benchmark. Analyses compared medication use (total and broad-spectrum antibacterials) for 3 metrics: days of therapy per 1,000 patient days; length of therapy; and proportion of patients receiving a medication across SIR levels. A multivariate, ordered-probit regression identified characteristics associated with SIR categories. RESULTS Regarding total average antimicrobial use per patient, there was a significant difference detected in mean length of therapy: 'No different' hospitals having the longest (4.93 days) versus 'Worse' (4.78 days) and 'Better' (4.43 days) (P

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Patterson, J. A., Edmond, M. B., Hohmann, S. F., & Pakyz, A. L. (2016). Association between High-Risk Medication Usage and Healthcare Facility-Onset C. difficile Infection. Infection Control and Hospital Epidemiology, 37(8), 909–915. https://doi.org/10.1017/ice.2016.87

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