Study: EHRs Could Help Physicians Decide When To Prescribe Antibiotics
Using electronic health record systems for disease surveillance could help physicians determine when it is appropriate to prescribe antibiotics, according to a study published in the Annals of Internal Medicine, Reuters reports.
Study Details
For the study, researchers from NorthShore University HealthSystem in Evanston, Ill., used EHRs to review data on 28,000 patients.
Each of the patients saw one of 69 physicians at NorthShore clinics and hospitals during influenza seasons between 2006 and 2011.
Key Findings
According to the study, physicians on average prescribed antibiotics 45% of the time for patients complaining of a fever and cough or cold symptoms.
The rate of antibiotic prescriptions issued varied widely by physician, with doctors prescribing antibiotics between 18% and 84% of the time, the study found.
Researchers noted that physicians often prescribed antibiotics when they were uncertain whether a bacterial infection was causing an illness.
Researchers also identified patterns suggesting that context influenced physicians' prescribing decisions. For example, antibiotic prescriptions decreased during flu "pandemic" periods, likely because doctors assumed that patients' symptoms were caused by the flu virus.
Researchers Comment on Findings
Study author Ari Robicsek of NorthShore said the finding that physicians prescribed fewer antibiotics during flu pandemics shows that hospitals could do more to inform physicians about illnesses in the community.
Robicsek said that NorthShore is working to develop a tool that would help hospitals use EHR data to alert physicians about illnesses in their area (Pittman, Reuters, 8/6). This is part of the California Healthline Daily Edition, a summary of health policy coverage from major news organizations. Sign up for an email subscription.