Affiliations 

  • 1 Section of Biomedical Sciences, University College of Pharmacy, University of the Punjab, Allama Iqbal Campus, 54000, Lahore, Pakistan. Electronic address: sabaziabutt@gmail.com
  • 2 Section of Biomedical Sciences, University College of Pharmacy, University of the Punjab, Allama Iqbal Campus, 54000, Lahore, Pakistan. Electronic address: ahmadmobasher@hotmail.com
  • 3 Section of Biomedical Sciences, University College of Pharmacy, University of the Punjab, Allama Iqbal Campus, 54000, Lahore, Pakistan; Section of Clinical Pharmacy, University College of Pharmacy, University of the Punjab, Allama Iqbal Campus, 54000, Lahore, Pakistan. Electronic address: hamid.pharmacy@pu.edu.pk
  • 4 Section of Clinical Pharmacy, University College of Pharmacy, University of the Punjab, Allama Iqbal Campus, 54000, Lahore, Pakistan; School of Pharmaceutical Sciences, Universiti Sains Malaysia, 11800 Gelugor, Penang, Malaysia; Rashid Latif College of Pharmacy, 54000, Lahore, Pakistan. Electronic address: xikria@gmail.com
  • 5 Punjab Institute of Cardiology, Jail Road, Lahore, Pakistan. Electronic address: zeepharm@yahoo.com
J Infect Public Health, 2019 06 10;12(6):854-860.
PMID: 31196776 DOI: 10.1016/j.jiph.2019.05.015

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Guidelines assisted appropriate use of prophylactic antibiotics can lower the prevalence of surgical site infections (SSIs). The present study was conducted to evaluate the impact and cost-benefit value of pharmacist's educational intervention for antibiotic use in post-surgical prophylaxis.

METHODS: A prospective quasi experimental study was conducted by enrolling 450 patients from tertiary care hospital of Lahore, Pakistan, 225 patients in each, control and intervention, arm using non-random convenient sampling. The study parameters included antibiotic indication, choice, dose, frequency, duration and associated costs. This study is registered with Chinese Clinical Trial Registry # ChiCTR-OON-17013246.

RESULTS AND CONCLUSION: After educational intervention, in post-intervention arm, total compliance in terms of correct antibiotic choice, dose, frequency and duration increased from 1.3% to 12.4%. The rate of inappropriate antibiotic choice did not change significantly. After intervention only metronidazole utilization decreased (16%) significantly (p=0.011). Significant reductions were observed in mean duration of antibiotic prophylaxis (17%, p=0.003), average number of prescribed antibiotics (9.1%, p=0.014) and average antibiotic cost (25.7%, p=0.03), with reduction in mean hospitalization cost (p=0.003) and length of stay (p=0.023). Educational intervention was significantly associated (OR; 2.4, p=0.005) with appropriate antibiotic prophylaxis. The benefit of pharmacist intervention, mean antibiotic cost savings to mean cost of pharmacist time, was 4.8:1. Thus, the educational intervention resulted in significant reductions in the duration and average number of antibiotic use having considerable effect on therapy and hospitalization cost.

* Title and MeSH Headings from MEDLINE®/PubMed®, a database of the U.S. National Library of Medicine.