Title: SMC Antibiotic Prescribing Policy
1Scottish Model Antibiotic Policy and
Prescribing (APPP)
Dilip Nathwani
Ninewells Hospital Medical School March 2003
2Background
- Antibiotics in hospitals
- 30 of hospitals pharmacy budget,
- 65 of inpatients are treated inappropriately
- Antibiotic policies
- 62 of UK hospitals have a policy for antibiotic
therapy - Few have information system for easy assessment
of practice
3Our study indicates a high level of confidence
amongst respondents that current control measures
are succeeding, and yet the usage patterns found
in this study indicate poor performances of these
same control measures
BSAC Working Party 1994 Hospital antibiotic
control
4...to ensure efficacy of control measures
and improved prescribing we need to include
the organisation features and implementation proce
dures of policies and formularies, the science
and psychology of prescribing, the design of
proper programmes for monitoring and evaluation
of therapy and prophylaxis and, most importantly,
the instigation of therapy and prophylaxis
BSAC Working Party 1994 Hospital antibiotic
control
5The Issues in Scotland
- In Scotland there are a number of challenges
related to antimicrobial prescribing facing
hospitals. - Evidence of wide variation in antimicrobial
prescribing policy and practice - Concern about insufficient regular liaison
between microbiologists, clinicians and
pharmacists - Concern about inadequate supervision of
prescribing and inappropriate choice, duration
and records of administration by junior doctors - Need to work particularly on standardisation of
approaches to acute hospital prescribing of
antimicrobials - Evidence of suboptimal linkage between
prescribing and infection expertise - Need for hospital wide multidisciplinary
approaches to antimicrobial prescribing including
role and limitations of medicines, knowledge of
local susceptibility patterns, use of IV and oral
routes, duration of treatment and prophylaxis,
monitoring of levels and routine collection of
data in relation to outcomes, streamlining/rationa
lisation and use of laboratory results
6SCOTTISH ACTION PLAN ON ANTIMICROBIAL RESISTANCE
AND HAI MINISTERIAL TASK FORCE
- Prudent Antimicrobial Prescribing is at the core
of the Scottish Action Plan on Antimicrobial
Resistance, alongside surveillance of resistance
and control of healthcare associated infection. - Prudent Antimicrobial Prescribing requires
multidisciplinary collaboration with a rigorous
approach to combining the best available research
evidence with detailed knowledge of local
clinical needs and antimicrobial resistance.
7 Antimicrobial prescribing policy and practice in
Scotland recommendations for good antimicrobial
practice in acute hospitals
- JAC 2006 57 1186-1196
- http//www.Scotland.gov.uk/publications/2005/09/02
132609/26114
8SMC and SEHD HAI TASK FORCE working party
- Bryson S
- Charlwood R
- Dancer S
- Davey P
- Gould I
- Gray R
- Haughney J
- McIver L
- Maxwell S
- Nathwani D
- Power A
- Seaton A
9APPP KEY DOMAINS FOR RECOMMENDATIONS
101. Establish standard structures and lines of
responsibility and accountability in NHS Scotland
across Boards
- Chief Executives of Boards and Single Delivery
Units take overall responsibility for APPP
within acute hospitals - HAI and prescribing should be on NHS boards Local
Delivery Plan which has replaced the Local Health
Plan and PAF.
112. Define structures and responsibility for
multi-disciplinary and generic undergraduate and
post-graduate training related to antimicrobial
prescribing
- Undergraduate
- to roll the programme out to all UK medical
schools - Postgraduate
- To roll out and develop programmes for
non-medical prescribers (nurses, pharmacists,
dentists etc) - Based around clinical vignettes and link to
competencies around antibiotic prescribing -
122. Define structures and responsibility for
multi-disciplinary and generic undergraduate and
post-graduate training related to antimicrobial
prescribing
- Undergraduate
- Appropriate Antibiotic Prescribing for Tomorrows
Doctor (APT) Project Funded by SEHD and BSAC
http//www.dundee.ac.uk/facmedden/APT/index.htm.
Web-based learning tool. - Postgraduate
- Scottish National Antibiotic Prescribing
Project (SNAPP) is funded by National Education
Scotland and the HAI SEHD Taskforce. E-learning
tool. - Aimed at on line training for doctors in training
at foundation level link between DOTS
(https//www.nhsdots.org/nhsdots/dotsx/login.asp)
and NES HAI portal ( http//www.elib.scot.nhs.uk/
portal//hai/Pages/index.aspx)
13Recommendation 3 Hospital Structures
- Multi-disciplinary anti-microbial management
team main remit implementation of the APPP
document - Replaces current antibiotic subcommittee
(formulary, guidelines/protocols, new drugs,
audit etc) - Lead Pharmacist and Lead Clinician for
Prescribing of Anti-microbials - Anti-microbial quality coordinator
- Communication of information (prescribing
quantity and quality), ensuring action
(implementation) and bridge between each of the
clinical groups and AMT
14Establish standard structures and lines of
responsibility and accountability in NHS Scotland
across Boards
- Antimicrobial Management Team (AMT) should be
formed to implement APPP. This should include a
microbiologist and/or id physician, a senior
management representative (e.g senior infection
control manager) and Lead Doctor and Lead
Pharmacist. Liase with DTC ICT. - Lead Doctor and Pharmacist should have prime
responsibility in ensuring the delivery of the
APPP objectives and is directly accountable to
the CE.
15Antibiotic Prescribing Policy Practice in Acute
Hospitals
Medical Director
Chief Executive
Infection Control Manager
Drugs Therapeutics Committee
Risk Management Committee
Antimicrobial Management Team (AMT)
Clinical Governance Committee
Dissemination feedback
Infection Control Committee
Speciality-based Pharmacy leads for APPP with
responsibility for antimicrobial prescribing
Microbiologist / Infectious Diseases Physician
Prescribing support / feedback
Ward Based Clinical Pharmacists
PRESCRIBER
http//www.scotland.gov.uk
16NHS TAYSIDE VISION
- In Tayside proposed Infection Control Managed
Network directly accountable to NHS Board - Strategic Function with lead Infection Control
Doctor, Lead Infection Control Nurse /Consultant,
Public Health, Infection Control Manager, Lead
Pharmacist and Lead Doctor for Prescribing and
Antibiotic Quality Co-ordinator. ? Risk
Management Lead - Operational Function Infection control team,
public health, risk management and AMT.
17The Clinical Effectiveness Cycle
Health intervention
New Research Systematic Reviews
Guideline development
Guideline implementation
Compliance measurement
Standard setting
Minimum data set Clinical audit criteria
185. Define key areas for acute hospital policy and
recommendations for audit
- National collection of consumption data to
evaluate use trends - Facilitate audit of quantity and quality of
antimicrobial consumption by use of point
prevalence snapshot survey - STRAMA
- GAAT
- ESAC
-
19European Surveillance of Antimicrobial
Consumption ESAC
20ESAC II (2004-2007)
- Main objectives
- To consolidate the continuous collection of
comprehensive antibiotic consumption data in all
European countries, for ambulatory care and
hospitals - To disseminate our knowledge in the field of
antibiotic consumption by the development of an
interactive ESAC website - To develop health indicators of antibiotic use
based on consumption data, to validate these
indicators and to use a set of core indicators
to give feedback of the antibiotic consumption in
the participating countries
21ESAC II
- Additional objective
- To deepen the knowledge of antibiotic consumption
- For hospital care (HC), data for individual
hospitals/wards - In ambulatory care (AC), data for specific
prescriber groups, specific age and sex
categories, specific high consumers groups and
for specific indications - Additionally (HC AC), a pharmaco-economic
evaluation
22Define the minimum dataset requirements and
standard procedures for collecting information
related to antimicrobial consumption and quality
of prescribing at an organisational level and/or
ward specific level.
- A national agency should collate and report
antimicrobial utilization trends across Scotland.
It is intended that these data would be collected
centrally by an organisation such as the
Medicines Utilisation Unit within NHS National
Services Scotland. - All acute hospitals should analyse and report
antimicrobial use using the WHO DDDs
(http//www.escmid.org/Seviware/Script/SvFiles.asp
?Ref404 ) as the numerator and occupied bed days
as the denominator. - Responsibility for setting standards and
reporting hospital antimicrobial use should be
clearly identified and implemented within all
acute hospitals. - In order to facilitate audits of antimicrobial
prescribing there should be national
co-ordination of minimum datasets for clinical
records to support prescribing for common
infections.
236 PERFORMANCE INDICATORS FOR ANTIMIROBIAL
PRESCRIBING
- Systems should be in place to measure
- qantimicrobial consumption by defined daily dose
(DDD) /1000 bed days for key antimicrobials.
Once such systems are developed and their
interpretation refined they should be considered
for assessment as an additional Board Performance
Indicator. - q the number of courses of antimicrobial therapy
exceeding 24 hours, expressed as a percentage of
the total number of courses in patients having
clean surgery. - q the number of antibiotic courses prescribed in
line with hospital policy for community acquired
pneumonia (CAP), expressed as a percentage of all
antibiotic courses prescribed for CAP
24Alert Antibiotics Ansari et al, JAC 52
(5)842-848, 2003.
- First implemented August 2001
- By 2004 clear evidence that use was going back up
- Re-launched February 2006 with quarterly feedback
via clinical groups - Pharmacy initiated consults to support early
switch from April 2006
25Controlled Before After, 2 Hospitals
Barlow et al 2006
Before
After
56
33
36
32
Intervention
Winter 2002
Winter 2003
26APPP Future
- Needs active implementation-early signs of action
by some boards - National co-ordination of consumption data
collection and feedback - Identify appropriate audit tool but link this to
quality improvement e,g at specific ward levels
or problem areas - Extend education and training particularly to non
specialist prescribers