Powerful Antibiotic Use is on the Rise in U.S. Hospitals
Powerful Antibiotic Use is on the Rise in U.S. Hospitals
The Centers for Disease Control, CDC, conducted a study that found powerful antibiotic use is on the rise in U.S. hospitals. The antibiotics in question are potent drugs designed to treat bacterial infections. They have historically been used after other treatment options have failed. The study was instituted as a result of the increasing incidents of antibiotic resistant bacteria.The CDC study was published on the JAMA Internal Medicine website on September 19, 2016. Its objective was to investigate inpatient acute care hospital antibiotic use over a period from January 2006 to December 2012. Approximately 300 hospitals involving more than 34 million hospitalizations of adult and pediatric patients were obtained from the Truven Health MarketScan Hospital Drug Database.The study indicated that there was not a large increase in the use of antibiotics, but there was an overall increase in the use of powerful antibiotics. In general, physicians were overlooking more conventional, first line, drugs or other methods for treating bacterial infections, including bloodstream, urinary tract, and pneumonia, in favor of powerful antibiotics, especially broad spectrum drugs.The CDC has been concerned about the issue for many years. The agency reports on its website that U.S. acute care hospitals prescribe antibiotics, even when they are unnecessary or inappropriate, for treatment in up to 50 percent of the cases. That practice has become a serious public health threat and it is growing. According to the CDC, there are approximately 23,000 deaths yearly as a result of antibiotic resistant bacterial infections.The reason the study is disturbing is the increase in antibiotic resistant bacterial infections. The bacteria are evolving and developing resistance to existing antibiotics. The result of an increased use of powerful antibiotics gives an increased opportunity for the bacteria to adapt and develop resistance.
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Sources
JAMA Internal MedicineCDCWall Street JournalAmerican Medical Association
About Andrea Tucker
Andrea has been writing full-time since 2008. Before she became a full-time freelance writer, she was employed as a paralegal for 14 years. Her legal employment duties included writing law-related documents such as Findings of Facts and Conclusions of Law, Memorandums of Law, miscellaneous letters, responses and completing investigative reports. She currently ghostwrites articles on a wide variety of topics.