Title: Improving IV antibiotic use; the role of the nurse
1Improving IV antibiotic use the role of the
nurse
- Lee Stewart
- Antimicrobials Pharmacist (South Glasgow)
2Overview
- Introduction the problems
- The solutions
- Empiric antibiotic policy
- Improving IV vancomycin and gentamicin use
- IVOST
- Alert antibiotics
- Summary and questions
3Introduction the problems
- 1/3 of inpatients will receive an antibiotic
- 1/3 of antibiotics given via the IV route
- 40 of the drug budget spent on antibiotics
up to 50 of antibiotic therapy is inappropriate
4Empiric antibiotic policy
5- Restricts the use of the 4c antibiotics
(greatest C difficile risk) - Co-amoxiclav
- Cephalosporins
- Ciprofloxacin ( other quinolones)
- Clindamycin
6Improving IV vancomycin and gentamicin use
7Vancomycin and gentamicin use
- Narrow therapeutic index agents
- Nephrotoxic and ototoxic
- When given IV, monitoring and interpretation of
blood levels essential for safe and effective use
Consistently in top 10 drugs associated with
reported medication incidents
8Getting it right 1
- Is the prescription clear?
- Dose frequency (especially if 48 hourly/stat
dose) - Is the dose reasonable?
- Shared responsibility ( liability)
- Gentamicin usually 180-400mg dose
- Vancomycin usually 500-1500mg dose
- Do you need to speak to the doctor?
- Levels not being checked
- Significantly delayed dose (e.g. lost IV access)
- Prescribed in once only section unsure if
ongoing - Is it OK to dose after level taken?
9Getting it right 2
- Use the Administration Recording Charts
- Essential for safe and effective treatment
- Record accurate infusion start and stop times
- Space to record accurate sample times for levels
- Gentamicin
- Infuse over 30-60 minutes
- Check the level after the initial dose then at
least every 2-3 days - See information sheet for further details
10Getting it right 3
- Vancomycin
- Beware of loading doses prescribed in the once
only section - Intermittent infusion maximum 500mg/hour
- Vancomycin continuous infusion 24 hour dose
split into 2 equal 12 hour continuous infusions - Levels are required if given IV (not for PO)
- Check the level within the first 12-48 hours then
at least every 2-3 days - See information sheet for further details
11IVOST
12IVOST Guideline
- IVOST IV to oral switch therapy
- IV antibiotic therapy often prolonged
unnecessarily in hospital - Increased risk of line infection bacteraemia
- Increased length of stay
- Increased expenditure
- Increased demands on nursing time
- IVOST guideline developed to enable a switch to
oral therapy to be made early and appropriately
13IVOST Guideline
- Review the need for IV therapy DAILY
Oral route compromised (e.g. vomiting, nil by
mouth, severe diarrhoea, swallowing disorder,
unconscious) or
Deteriorating clinical condition/Continuing
sepsis (i.e. 2 or more of temp gt38C or
lt36C, heart rate gt90bpm, respiratory rate
gt20/minute, WCC lt4 or gt12) or
Special indication (e.g. meningitis/CNS
infeciton, endocarditis, immunosuppression,
bone/joint infection, deep abscess, cystic
fibrosis, moderate to severe cellulitis, severe
penumonia) or
No oral formulation of the drug available
NO?
Switch to oral therapy
14Nurse involvement with IVOST
- Prompt for daily review of IV route alert
medical staff to changes in availability of oral
route - Alert medical staff when sepsis is resolving
- Nurses obtain and document ¾ of the criteria
- if temp 36-38oC, pulse 90bpm and RR 20 then the
patient will not meet the definition of sepsis,
regardless of the WCC - Prompt medical staff to consult microbiology when
IV gentamicin is required for gt72 hours
15Alert Antibiotics
16Alert Antibiotics
- Alert Antibiotics are
- Broad spectrum
- Toxic
- Expensive
- Valuable agents reserved for
- specified permitted indications
- other indications only on the advice of a
microbiologist/ID physician
17Alert Antibiotics
Pharmacy can only supply these alert antibiotics
when an Alert Antibiotic Form
has been completed fully
18Alert Antibiotic Form
- Available from
- Pharmacy distribution
- Intranet (? Clinical info ? antimicrobial
guidelines) - Completed by medical staff and/or pharmacists
- Nurses
- Ordering without a form can lead to delays in
supply - Send the completed form to pharmacy with the
first indent requesting the alert antibiotic - Re-order the same antibiotic for the same patient
by including the patients name/unit number on
the indent
19Alert supply of at weekends/OOH
- Doses must not be omitted due to inability to
have a form completed - If necessary, pharmacy will supply limited
amounts at weekends without an alert form - Alert antibiotics will continue to be held in
emergency cupboards and be available via the
on-site co-ordinator/on-call pharmacist - A completed Alert Antibiotic Form should be sent
to pharmacy as soon as possible on the next
working day
20Further information
- Posters on wards
- Therapeutics Handbook
- Intranet (? Clinical info ? antimicrobial
guidelines) - BNF
- IV monographs
- Nurse information sheets
- Local Antimicrobials Pharmacist
21Summary
- You will see many antibiotic prescriptions
- Up to 50 of these will be inappropriate
- Inappropriate use has adverse patient and
public health consequences - NHSGGC has policies to promote and
support prudent antimicrobial use - YOU have a key role to play in ensuring that
patients receive appropriate, safe and effective
antimicrobial therapy