Citation

BibTex format

@article{Rawson:2015:jac/dkv337,
author = {Rawson, TM and Moore, LSP and Gilchrist, MJ and Holmes, AH},
doi = {jac/dkv337},
journal = {Journal of Antimicrobial Chemotherapy},
pages = {554--559},
title = {Antimicrobial stewardship: are we failing in cross-specialty clinical engagement?},
url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/jac/dkv337},
volume = {71},
year = {2015}
}

RIS format (EndNote, RefMan)

TY  - JOUR
AB - Background Antimicrobial resistance (AMR) is a public health priority and leading patient safety issue. Globally, antimicrobial stewardship (AMS) has been integral in promoting therapeutic optimization whilst minimizing harmful antimicrobial use. A cross-sectional, observational study was undertaken to investigate the coverage of AMS and antibacterial resistance across clinical scientific conferences in 2014, as a surrogate marker for current awareness and attributed importance.Methods Clinical specialties were identified, and the largest corresponding clinical scientific/research conferences in 2014 determined (i) within the UK and (ii) internationally. Conference characteristics and abstracts were interrogated and analysed to determine those related to AMS and AMR. Inter-specialty variation was assessed using χ2 or Fisher's exact statistical analysis.Results In total, 45 conferences from 23 specialties were analysed representing 59682 accepted abstracts. The UK had a significantly greater proportion of AMS-AMR-related abstracts compared with international conferences [2.8% (n=221/7843) compared with 1.8% (n=942/51839); P<0.001]. Infection conferences contained the greatest proportion of AMS-AMR abstracts, representing 20% (732/3669) of all abstracts [UK 66% (80/121) and international 18% (652/3548); P<0.0001]. AMS-AMR coverage across all general specialties was poor [intensive care 9% (116/1287), surgical 1% (8/757) and medical specialties 0.64% (332/51497)] despite high usage of antimicrobials across all.Conclusions Despite current AMS-AMR strategies being advocated by infection specialists and discussed by national and international policy makers, AMS-AMR coverage remained limited across clinical specialty scientific conferences in 2014. We call for further intervention to ensure specialty engagement with AMS programmes and promote the AMR agenda across clinical practice.
AU - Rawson,TM
AU - Moore,LSP
AU - Gilchrist,MJ
AU - Holmes,AH
DO - jac/dkv337
EP - 559
PY - 2015///
SN - 1460-2091
SP - 554
TI - Antimicrobial stewardship: are we failing in cross-specialty clinical engagement?
T2 - Journal of Antimicrobial Chemotherapy
UR - http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/jac/dkv337
UR - http://hdl.handle.net/10044/1/42325
VL - 71
ER -