Careful prescribing proves superbug resistance not futile
Careful prescribing proves superbug resistance not futile
Good management of antibiotic use in hospital
has delivered “better than expected” results for
patients at Capital & Coast District Health Board (CCDHB),
an infectious diseases expert says.
A presentation
shown as part of Antibiotic Awareness week indicates that
measures to raise awareness of resistance have reduced
antibiotic use and the frequency of some antibiotic
resistant infections at CCDHB, says infectious diseases
physician Dr Tim Blackmore.
Antibiotic resistant
bacteria, commonly known as ‘superbugs’, are more
difficult to treat and can be associated with higher rates
of mortality and morbidity.
Dr Blackmore says
targeting overuse of specific antibiotics and prescribing
has enabled a 13% percent reduction in the use of
antibiotics at CCDHB since 2011, and decreased the number of
antibiotic resistant infections like clostridium difficile
at Wellington Hospital.
This work has been driven by
CCDHB’s antibiotic stewardship team, which is comprised of
a specialty infectious diseases pharmacist and
doctors.
Extended Spectrum Beta Lactamase (ESBL) and
Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) are two
of the most widely-known antibiotic resistant bacteria in
New Zealand. Infection rates for both at CCDHB and the Hutt
Valley DHB are among the lowest in the country.
Dr
Blackmore says the results show that rates of antibiotic
resistance can be slowed with careful management of
antibiotic use, even if resistance rates continue to rise
internationally.
“Our health system is reliant on
antibiotics to treat everything from minor cuts to
life-threatening infections, which makes it vulnerable to
the threat of antibiotic resistance.
“Last year’s
widely-publicised case won’t be the last patient we see
with a bacterium resistant to all-known antibiotics, but if
health professionals and the public are careful with our
use, we can delay the onset of the post-antibiotic era in
New Zealand,” he says.
New Zealanders consumed more
antibiotics than almost any other country in the world
between 2000 and 2010, according to global study published
in the Lancet medical journal this year.
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