[Survey on antibiotic prescription practices for palliative care terminally ill patients of 75 years old and more]. Henri, B., Sirvain, S., de Wazieres, B., M Durand, n., Bernard, L., Gavazzi, G., Forestier, E., Fraisse, T., & Ginger La Revue De Medecine Interne, 43(10):589–595, October, 2022.
doi  abstract   bibtex   
Infections commonly occur terminally ill oldest patients in palliative care and questioned about antimicrobial use. The aim of this study was to describe practitioners' habits. METHOD: ancillary study on antibiotic modalities according to the setting of care from a national practices survey based on self administered questionnaire sent by e-mail in 2017. RESULTS: 220 practitioners/327 used antibiotic, 136 worked in hospital department (52 geriatricians), 20 nursing home and 64 general practitioners (GP). GP declared less palliative care patients (6/year). The antibiotic goal was symptomatic relief for 181 (82.3%) without statistically significant difference between groups. GP (25%) were the group that most collected patient opinion for antibiotic prescription. Nursing home (23%) and GP (18%) reported more urinary tract symptoms than others (11.7%) (P=0.003). Geriatricians (59.6%) declared significantly less urinary analysis than GP (90%) (P=0.0009). 212 doctor (96.4%) faced side effect (SI): more allergic reaction and less administration difficulties than the other groups. The stop decision was collegially took (156, 70,9%) significantly more in hospital (121, 89%) than in community (25, 39.1%) (P\textless0.001). Patient wishes were noted by 30 (46.96%) only GP. CONCLUSION: Even if practice and number of patients follow up differ from each place of care, doctors' intention in antibiotic use respect palliative care goal to relieve discomfort. It is hard to diagnose infection and complementary exam are scarce. A repeated individualized evaluation with patient, his surrounding and his medical referent participation, is mandatory to give a constant adapted level of care in every place of care.
@article{henri_survey_2022,
	title = {[{Survey} on antibiotic prescription practices for palliative care terminally ill patients of 75 years old and more]},
	volume = {43},
	issn = {1768-3122},
	doi = {10.1016/j.revmed.2022.08.011},
	abstract = {Infections commonly occur terminally ill oldest patients in palliative care and questioned about antimicrobial use. The aim of this study was to describe practitioners' habits.
METHOD: ancillary study on antibiotic modalities according to the setting of care from a national practices survey based on self administered questionnaire sent by e-mail in 2017.
RESULTS: 220 practitioners/327 used antibiotic, 136 worked in hospital department (52 geriatricians), 20 nursing home and 64 general practitioners (GP). GP declared less palliative care patients (6/year). The antibiotic goal was symptomatic relief for 181 (82.3\%) without statistically significant difference between groups. GP (25\%) were the group that most collected patient opinion for antibiotic prescription. Nursing home (23\%) and GP (18\%) reported more urinary tract symptoms than others (11.7\%) (P=0.003). Geriatricians (59.6\%) declared significantly less urinary analysis than GP (90\%) (P=0.0009). 212 doctor (96.4\%) faced side effect (SI): more allergic reaction and less administration difficulties than the other groups. The stop decision was collegially took (156, 70,9\%) significantly more in hospital (121, 89\%) than in community (25, 39.1\%) (P{\textless}0.001). Patient wishes were noted by 30 (46.96\%) only GP.
CONCLUSION: Even if practice and number of patients follow up differ from each place of care, doctors' intention in antibiotic use respect palliative care goal to relieve discomfort. It is hard to diagnose infection and complementary exam are scarce. A repeated individualized evaluation with patient, his surrounding and his medical referent participation, is mandatory to give a constant adapted level of care in every place of care.},
	language = {fre},
	number = {10},
	journal = {La Revue De Medecine Interne},
	author = {Henri, B. and Sirvain, S. and de Wazieres, B. and M Durand, null and Bernard, L. and Gavazzi, G. and Forestier, E. and Fraisse, T. and {Ginger}},
	month = oct,
	year = {2022},
	pmid = {36064626},
	keywords = {Aged, Anti-Bacterial Agents, Antibiothérapie, Antibiotic drug, Cross-Sectional Studies, End of live, Fin de vie, General Practitioners, Humans, Palliative Care, Patient of 75 years and more, Patients de plus de 75 ans, Prescriptions, Surveys and Questionnaires, Terminally Ill},
	pages = {589--595},
}

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