A Prospective Antimicrobial Prescription Audit in the Inpatient Department of Pulmonology in a Tertiary Care Hospital

Pharmaceutical Science-Pharmacy practice for good health promotion

Authors

  • Arul Prakasam Associate Professor, Department Of Pharmacy Practice, JKKMMRF’S AJKKSA College Of Pharmacy, Komarapalayam, Namakkal, Tamilnadu, India- 638183
  • Abhirami Jayachandran Sixth Year Doctor Of Pharmacy, Department Of Pharmacy Practice, JKKMMRF’S AJKKSA College Of Pharmacy, Komarapalayam, Namakkal, Tamilnadu, India- 638183, The Tamilnadu Dr. MGR Medical University, Chennai, Tamilnadu, India
  • Archana M Nair Sixth Year Doctor Of Pharmacy, Department Of Pharmacy Practice, JKKMMRF’S AJKKSA College Of Pharmacy, Komarapalayam, Namakkal, Tamilnadu, India- 638183, The Tamilnadu Dr. MGR Medical University, Chennai, Tamilnadu, India
  • Asmina Sherin Hazankutty Sixth Year Doctor Of Pharmacy, Department Of Pharmacy Practice, JKKMMRF’S AJKKSA College Of Pharmacy, Komarapalayam, Namakkal, Tamilnadu, India- 638183, The Tamilnadu Dr. MGR Medical University, Chennai, Tamilnadu, India
  • Pooja Chandran Sixth Year Doctor Of Pharmacy, Department Of Pharmacy Practice, JKKMMRF’S AJKKSA College Of Pharmacy, Komarapalayam, Namakkal, Tamilnadu, India- 638183, The Tamilnadu Dr. MGR Medical University, Chennai, Tamilnadu, India

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.22376/ijpbs/lpr.2020.10.1.P63-73

Keywords:

Antimicrobial prescription audit, Antibiotic resistance, Pulmonology, Medication error, rational use of antibiotics.

Abstract

Antibiotics are medicines used to prevent and treat bacterial infections. Antibiotic usage is increasing rapidly day by day with  or  without  prescription.  Irrational  prescription  usage,  negligence  of standard guidelines and antimicrobial resistance are increasing complexity in the therapy and the desired outcome. High-volume prescription of antibiotics in primary health care is a major factor contributing to antibiotic resistance. Educating    physicians and patients can lower prescribing errors and the aim of this study was to do a prospective observational prescription  audit in  inpatient department of pulmonology in  a tertiary care hospital and limiting the inappropriate use of antimicrobials. The primary objective of the study is to determine the Antibiotic prescription,  find  out  the  inappropriate  drug  selection,  dose selection, dosage form and course of antibiotics to monitor the culture test as well as antibiotic sensitivity and resistance and also to analyze the drug interaction, allergic medication prescribed and omission of the dose. The study was conducted with 234 patients in Erode district, Tamilnadu. The study conducted by strictly observing  the  antimicrobial  prescription  in  the  inpatient  pulmonology  department  in  a  tertiary  care  hospital,  limiting  the inappropriate drug selection, dose selection, dosage form, course of antibiotics and hence decreasing the antibiotic resistance. The prescribing and administering details were collected in a data acquisition form; the collected data were interpreted with Sanford and GOLD Standard Guidelines and analyzed with descriptive statistics. The study found that irrational use of medication was high (53.41%)  and  a  highly  significant  medication  error  also  reported.  The  major concomitant disorder was Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disorder (21.79%) and most administered drug was Ceftriaxone (20.51%) (Third generation Cephalosporins). Culture test (32.90%) as well as antibiotic sensitivity and resistance test were done in very less cases, empirical therapy dominates over targeted therapy which affects rationality.

Published

2022-06-23

How to Cite

Arul Prakasam, Abhirami Jayachandran, Archana M Nair, Asmina Sherin Hazankutty, & Pooja Chandran. (2022). A Prospective Antimicrobial Prescription Audit in the Inpatient Department of Pulmonology in a Tertiary Care Hospital: Pharmaceutical Science-Pharmacy practice for good health promotion. International Journal of Life Science and Pharma Research, 10(1), 63–73. https://doi.org/10.22376/ijpbs/lpr.2020.10.1.P63-73

Issue

Section

Research Articles