Assessment of antimicrobial stewardship programmes and antibiotic use among children admitted to two hospitals in Sierra Leone: a cross-sectional study

Ibrahim Franklyn Kamara, Bobson Derrick Fofanah, Innocent Nuwagira, Kadijatu Nabie Kamara, Sia Morenike Tengbe, Onome Abiri, Rugiatu Z. Kamara, Sulaiman Lakoh, Lynda Farma, Abibatu Kollia Kamara, Binyam Hailu, Djossaya Dove, James Sylvester Squire, Selassi A. D’Almeida, Bockarie Sheriff, Ayeshatu Mustapha, Najima Bawa, Hailemariam Lagesse, Aminata Tigiedankay Koroma, Joseph Sam Kanu
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Abstract

Antimicrobial resistance (AMR) is a global public health concern and irrational use of antibiotics in hospitals is a key driver of AMR. Even though it is not preventable, antimicrobial stewardship (AMS) programmes will reduce or slow it down. Research evidence from Sierra Leone has demonstrated the high use of antibiotics in hospitals, but no study has assessed hospital AMS programmes and antibiotic use specifically among children. We conducted the first-ever study to assess the AMS programmes and antibiotics use in two tertiary hospitals in Sierra Leone. This was a hospital-based cross-sectional survey using the World Health Organization (WHO) point prevalence survey (PPS) methodology. Data was collected from the medical records of eligible patients at the Ola During Children’s Hospital (ODCH) and Makeni Regional Hospital (MRH) using the WHO PPS hospital questionnaire; and required data collection forms. The prescribed antibiotics were classified according to the WHO Access, Watch, and Reserve (AWaRe) classification. Ethics approval was obtained from the Sierra Leone Ethics and Scientific Review Committee. Statistical analysis was conducted using the SPSS version 22. Both ODCH and MRH did not have the required AMS infrastructure; policy and practice; and monitoring and feedback mechanisms to ensure rational antibiotic prescribing. Of the 150 patients included in the survey, 116 (77.3%) were admitted at ODCH and 34 (22.7%) to MRH, 77 (51.3%) were males and 73 (48.7%) were females. The mean age was 2 years (SD=3.5). The overall prevalence of antibiotic use was 84.7% (95% CI: 77.9% – 90.0%) and 77 (83.8%) of the children aged less than one year received an antibiotic. The proportion of males that received antibiotics was higher than that of females. Most (58, 47.2 %) of the patients received at least two antibiotics. The top five antibiotics prescribed were gentamycin (100, 27.4%), ceftriaxone (76, 20.3%), ampicillin (71, 19.5%), metronidazole (44, 12.1%), and cefotaxime (31, 8.5%). Community-acquired infections were the primary diagnoses for antibiotic prescription. The non-existence of AMS programmes might have contributed to the high use of antibiotics at ODCH and MRH. This has the potential to increase antibiotic selection pressure and in turn the AMR burden in the country. There is need to establish hospital AMS teams and train health workers on the rational use of antibiotics.
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塞拉利昂两家医院对抗菌药物管理计划和儿童抗生素使用情况的评估:一项横断面研究
抗菌药物耐药性(AMR)是一个全球性的公共卫生问题,而医院不合理使用抗生素则是造成抗菌药物耐药性的主要原因。尽管抗生素耐药性无法预防,但抗菌药物管理计划(AMS)可以减少或减缓抗生素耐药性。塞拉利昂的研究证据表明,医院中抗生素的使用率很高,但还没有研究对医院抗菌药物管理计划和儿童抗生素使用情况进行专门评估。我们在塞拉利昂的两家三级医院开展了有史以来第一项研究,以评估 AMS 计划和抗生素的使用情况。这是一项基于医院的横断面调查,采用了世界卫生组织(WHO)的点流行率调查(PPS)方法。调查使用世界卫生组织点流行率调查医院问卷和所需的数据收集表,从奥拉儿童医院(ODCH)和马克尼地区医院(MRH)符合条件的患者病历中收集数据。处方抗生素根据世界卫生组织的 "获取、观察和储备"(AWaRe)分类法进行分类。该研究获得了塞拉利昂伦理与科学审查委员会的伦理批准。统计分析使用 SPSS 22 版本进行。ODCH 和 MRH 都不具备所需的 AMS 基础设施、政策和实践以及监测和反馈机制,无法确保合理的抗生素处方。在参与调查的150名患者中,有116人(77.3%)在奥杜拉医院住院,34人(22.7%)在玛丽亚医院住院,77人(51.3%)为男性,73人(48.7%)为女性。平均年龄为 2 岁(SD=3.5)。抗生素的总体使用率为84.7%(95% CI:77.9% - 90.0%),77名(83.8%)一岁以下儿童使用了抗生素。使用抗生素的男性比例高于女性。大多数患者(58 人,47.2%)至少服用了两种抗生素。处方量最大的五种抗生素分别是庆大霉素(100,27.4%)、头孢曲松(76,20.3%)、氨苄西林(71,19.5%)、甲硝唑(44,12.1%)和头孢噻肟(31,8.5%)。社区获得性感染是抗生素处方的主要诊断依据。由于不存在AMS计划,这可能是导致俄克拉荷马州立医院和马里兰州立医院大量使用抗生素的原因之一。这有可能增加抗生素的选择压力,进而加重该国的急性呼吸道感染负担。有必要建立医院 AMS 小组,并对卫生工作者进行合理使用抗生素的培训。
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