2017-2020年,使用ICD-9-CM代码评估加拿大阿尔伯塔省社区抗生素处方的适当性:一项横断面研究。

CMAJ open Pub Date : 2023-07-04 Print Date: 2023-07-01 DOI:10.9778/cmajo.20220114
Myles Leslie, Raad Fadaak, Brendan Cord Lethebe, Jessie Hart Szostakiwskyj
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:抗微生物耐药性对人类健康的威胁越来越大,由于社区中90%的抗生素都是处方药,因此检查加拿大在门诊环境中的抗生素管理做法至关重要。我们对阿尔伯塔省成年人以社区为基础开具抗生素处方的适当性进行了大规模分析,报告了该省执业医生3年的数据。方法:研究队列由所有成年(18-65岁)阿尔伯塔省居民组成,他们在2017年4月1日至2020年3月6日期间至少开具了一份由社区医生开具的抗生素处方。我们将国际疾病分类第九次修订版(ICD-9-CM)的临床修改中的诊断代码与该省配药数据库中保存的配药记录联系起来,该代码由该省的服务社区医生收费用于计费目的。我们包括从事社区医学、全科医学、全方位心理健康、老年医学和职业医学的医生。按照之前研究中使用的方法,我们将诊断代码与抗生素药物处方联系起来,根据适当性进行分类(总是,有时从来没有,没有诊断代码)。结果:我们确定了5577名医生为1351193名成年患者开具的3114400张抗生素处方。在这些处方中,253038(8.1%)“始终合适”,1168131(37.5%)“潜在合适”,219709(39.2%)“从不合适”,473522(15.2%)与ICD-9-CM计费代码无关。在所有开具的抗生素处方中,阿莫西林、阿奇霉素和克拉霉素是最常见的被标记为“永远不合适”的处方药。解释:我们发现,在35个月的时间里,阿尔伯塔省社区环境中,135万成年患者开具的处方中,近40%是不合适的。这一发现表明,可能有必要制定额外的政策和计划,以改善阿尔伯塔省为成年门诊患者开具抗生素处方的医生的管理。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

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Assessing the appropriateness of community-based antibiotic prescribing in Alberta, Canada, 2017-2020, using ICD-9-CM codes: a cross-sectional study.

Background: Antimicrobial resistance is a rising threat to human health, and, with up to 90% of antibiotics prescribed in the community, it is critical to examine Canadian antibiotic stewardship practices in outpatient settings. We carried out a large-scale analysis of appropriateness in community-based prescribing of antibiotics to adults in Alberta, reporting on 3 years of data from physicians practising in the province.

Methods: The study cohort was composed of all adult (age 18-65 yr) Alberta residents who filled at least 1 antibiotic prescription written by a community-based physician between Apr. 1, 2017, and Mar. 6, 2020. We linked diagnosis codes from the clinical modification of the International Classification of Diseases, 9th Revision (ICD-9-CM), as used for billing purposes by the province's fee-for-service community physicians, to drug dispensing records, as maintained in the province's pharmaceutical dispensing database. We included physicians practising in community medicine, general practice, generalist mental health, geriatric medicine and occupational medicine. Following an approach used in previous research, we linked diagnosis codes with antibiotic drug dispensations, classified across a spectrum of appropriateness (always, sometimes never, no diagnosis code).

Results: We identified 3 114 400 antibiotic prescriptions dispensed to 1 351 193 adult patients by 5577 physicians. Of these prescriptions, 253 038 (8.1%) were "always appropriate," 1 168 131 (37.5%) were "potentially appropriate," 1 219 709 (39.2%) were "never appropriate," and 473 522 (15.2%) were not associated with an ICD-9-CM billing code. Among all dispensed antibiotic prescriptions, amoxicillin, azithromycin and clarithromycin were the most commonly prescribed drugs labelled "never appropriate."

Interpretation: We found that nearly 40% of prescriptions dispensed to 1.35 million adult patients in Alberta's community-based settings over a 35-month period were inappropriate. This finding suggests that additional policies and programs to improve stewardship among physicians prescribing antibiotics for adult outpatients in Alberta may be warranted.

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