Abstract

Outpatient antibiotics are most frequently prescribed for upper respiratory tract infection (URI); however, most such prescriptions are inappropriate. We aimed to determine the effect of an electronic clinical pathway on the rates of overall and rational prescription of antibiotics in patients with URI. A pilot quasi-experimental study was conducted in a university hospital and two of its nearby primary care units (PCU) in northeast Thailand from June to September 2020. Clinical pathway pop-up windows were inserted into the hospital’s computer-based prescription system. Care providers were required to check the appropriate boxes before they were able to prescribe amoxicillin or co-amoxiclav. We examined a total of 675 visits to the outpatient department due to URI at three points in time: pre-intervention, immediately post-intervention, and 6 weeks post-intervention. Patients in the latter group tended to be younger and visits were more likely to be general practitioner-related and to the student PCU than in the other two groups. In addition, the rate of antibiotic prescription was significantly lower at 6 weeks after intervention than at either of the other time periods (32.0% vs 53.8% pre-intervention and 46.2% immediately post-intervention; p < 0.001), and the proportion of rational antibiotic prescriptions increased significantly after implementation. Antibiotic prescription rates were lower at the community primary care unit and higher when the physician was a resident or a family doctor. The deployment of an electronic clinical pathway reduced the rate of unnecessary antibiotic prescriptions. The effect was greater at 6 weeks post-implementation. However, discrepancy of patients’ baseline characteristics may have skewed the findings.

Highlights

  • The spread of multidrug-resistant (MDR) bacteria is one of the most urgent global crises we currently face

  • The patients’ mean age was 34.9 years, 31.7% were male, and most had no medical conditions. Those included in the pre-intervention and immediate postintervention groups had similar baseline characteristics, with the exception that exudative tonsillitis and tenderness of cervical lymph nodes were more common in the latter group

  • Patients in the 6 weeks post-intervention group were more likely to be younger, present with cough, have no recurrent upper respiratory tract infection (URI) history, and present at the student primary care unit (PCU), and were less likely to present at a premium clinic or ear nose throat (ENT) outpatient department (OPD)

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Summary

Introduction

The spread of multidrug-resistant (MDR) bacteria is one of the most urgent global crises we currently face. In Thailand, there are more than 100,000 cases of infection caused by MDR bacteria annually, resulting in approximately 38,000 deaths and costing around THB 40 billion (0.6 percent of Thailand’s gross domestic product (GDP)) [2]. Antibiotics are most frequently used to treat upper respiratory tract infection (URI). Such cases account for 75% of all antibiotic use in Ireland and 77% in Thailand [4,5]. Upper respiratory tract symptoms can derive from atopic conditions (e.g., allergic rhinitis) [11], which may lead to unnecessary antibiotic prescription if care providers do not keep this in mind

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