Becker's Clinical Quality & Infection Control

July 2016 Issue of Becker's Infection Control & Clinical Quality

Issue link: https://beckershealthcare.uberflip.com/i/704703

Contents of this Issue

Navigation

Page 45 of 47

46 LESS TIME. LESS LABOR. MORE SAVINGS. The Surfacide UV-C Disinfection System is the ONLY system that: • uses 3 towers instead of 1 • delivers total room disinfection in a single cycle • eliminates shadows To schedule a live demonstration, call toll free: 844-390-3538. Surfacide.com FIRST-GENERATION UV ROOM CLEANING 20 minutes *Terminal Decontamination of Patient Rooms Using an Automated Mobile UV Light Unit, Infect Control Hosp Epidemiol 2011;32(8):737-742 51-146.3 minutes,* moving three to five times It May be Safe for Physicians to Prescribe Fewer Antibiotics, Researchers Say By Max Green R ecent research has painted a gloomy portrait of the state of antibiotics: Clinicians prescribe them too oen and patients oen don't follow the course of treatment properly. ese two factors have contributed to increasing rates of resistance in deadly bacteria, but limiting the amount of antibiotics prescribed has raised concerns about consequences for patients, such as bacterial complications and spreading infections. But new research from the U.K. suggests, in some instances, it might be fine to forego an antibiotic prescription. In an analysis of patient records from more than 610 general practices in the U.K., researchers found the practices with lower rates of antibiotic prescription for respiratory tract infections did not have patients with higher rates of serious bacterial complications, thought to arise when an infection is not treated with antibiotics. However, practices with lower prescription rates did have slightly higher rates of pneumonia and peritonsillar abscess, both rare and treatable with antibiotics. "Overuse of antibiotics now may result in increasing infections by resistant bacteria in the future," Martin Gulliford, PhD, lead author of the study, said in a statement. "Current treatment recommendations are to avoid antibiotics for self-limiting respiratory infections. Our results suggest that, if antibiotics are not taken, this should carry no increased risk of more serious complications." The researchers estimated that if a practice seeing 7,000 patients per year reduced the amount of antibiotics it prescribed by 10 percent, there could be a single extra case of pneumonia each year. Reducing antibiotic prescriptions by a significant amount would also reduce the side effects about 10 percent of people who take them develop, the authors conclude. n

Articles in this issue

Links on this page

view archives of Becker's Clinical Quality & Infection Control - July 2016 Issue of Becker's Infection Control & Clinical Quality