Title
Antimicrobial prescribing in referral hospitals in Timor-Leste: results of the first two national point prevalence surveys, 2020-21.
Link to article in PubMed
Author(s)
Ximenes, Guilherme
Saha, Sajal K
Guterres, Helio
Vieira, Adriano
Harris, Lisa
Mahony, Michelle
Dos Santos, Agata
Toto, Lucia
Amaral, Elfiana
Amaral, Salvador
Champlin, Karen
Abstract
To describe antimicrobial use (AMU) in patients admitted to hospitals in Timor-Leste.In 2020 and 2021, we undertook antimicrobial prescribing point prevalence surveys across all six hospitals in Timor-Leste (one national and five municipal) to describe AMU and appropriateness in admitted patients.In 2020, 291/394 (73.9%) surveyed patients had been prescribed antimicrobials, compared with 260/403 (64.5%) in 2021 ( = 0.004). Most (309/551; 56.1%) were prescribed one antimicrobial, and 179/551 (32.5%) were prescribed two. The most commonly prescribed antibiotics were ceftriaxone (38.5% in 2020, 41.5% in 2021) and ampicillin (35.7% in 2020, 32.3% in 2021), followed by gentamicin, metronidazole and cloxacillin. Reserve antibiotics like meropenem and vancomycin were minimally used. Of all antimicrobial prescriptions, 70.8% were deemed appropriate in 2020 and 69.1% in 2021. Antimicrobial prescriptions for surgical and post-partum prophylaxis were frequently deemed inappropriate [37/50 (74.0%) and 39/44 (88.6%) prescriptions, respectively].Most patients admitted to hospital in Timor-Leste are prescribed antimicrobials, and approximately one-third of these prescriptions are inappropriate. However, this was in the context of limited local guideline availability at the time of surveys and limited microbiological culture capacity outside of the capital, Dili. Improved microbiological guidance, iterative guideline revisions based on local antimicrobial resistance (AMR) surveillance data, and enhanced stewardship activities including further point prevalence studies, could improve antimicrobial use, optimize patient outcomes and reduce AMR in Timor-Leste.
Publication information
JAC Antimicrob Resist . 2024 Aug 1;6(4):dlae123. doi: 10.1093/jacamr/dlae123. eCollection 2024 Aug.
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Name
Antimicrobial prescribing in referral hospitals in Timor-Leste: results of the first two national point prevalence surveys, 2020-21
Description
Re-used under a Creative Commons Attribution License: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/
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1.59 MB
Format
Adobe PDF
Checksum
(MD5):70f85423d8e9afa74fea0fa0d00ea6d2
Date Issued
2024-08-01
Type
Journal Article
Journal Title
JAC-antimicrobial resistance
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