Current evidence suggests that controlling antibiotic resistance requires the monitoring of both susceptibility trends and antimicrobial usage within specific patient-care areas of the hospital. To assess the differences between antimicrobial usage-versus-susceptibility relationships found in the hospital and those relationships found in specific patient-care areas, susceptibility and antimicrobial usage data collected over a 5-year period (1992-1996) at the Medical University of South Carolina were analyzed. For each area, the relationship between drug use and susceptibility was analyzed for 8 gram-negative organisms with respect to 19 different agents and for 3 staphylococci with respect to 10 agents with use of simple linear regression. The relationships found in the hospital had a poorer overall agreement with the relationships found in the intensive care units (ICUs; <20%) than they did with the relationships found in the non-ICUs (∼65%). Surveillance should include both susceptibility and drug usage patterns in individual areas within an institution.
CITATION STYLE
White, R. L., Friedrich, L. V., Mihm, L. B., & Bosso, J. A. (2000). Assessment of the relationship between antimicrobial usage and susceptibility: Differences between the hospital and specific patient-care areas. Clinical Infectious Diseases, 31(1), 16–23. https://doi.org/10.1086/313916
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