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White Paper: Bridging the gap between surveillance data and antimicrobial stewardship in the outpatient sector—practical guidance from the JPIAMR ARCH and COMBACTE-MAGNET EPI-Net networks

Authors :
Arieti, Fabiana
Göpel, Siri
Sibani, Marcella
Carrara, Elena
Pezzani, Maria Diletta
Murri, Rita
Mutters, Nico T
Lòpez-Cerero, Lorena
Voss, Andreas
Cauda, Roberto
Tacconelli, Evelina
ARCH working group (Collaborators): Ayola Akim Adegnika
Fabiana, Arieti
Nithya Babu Rajendran
Julia, Bielicki
Steffen, Borrmann
Elena, Carrara
Roberto, Cauda
Compri, Monica
Giulia De Angelis
Raquel, Duro
Galia, Liliana
Petra, Gastmeier
Christian, Giske
Siri, Göpel
Herman, Goossens
Gunnar, Kahlmeter
Souha, S Kanj
Tomislav, Kostyanev
Leonard, Leibovici
Jean-Christophe, Lucet
Lorena, López-Cerero
Rodolphe, Mader
Mazzaferri, Fulvia
Elena, Mazzolini
Marc, Mendelson
Rita, Murri
Nico, T Mutters
Mical, Paul
Maria Diletta Pezzani
Elisabeth, Presterl
Hanna, R Enk
Oana, Sandulescu
Le Huu Song
Remco, Schrijver
Luigia, Scudeller
Mike, Sharland
Marcella, Sibani
Evelina, Tacconelli
Didem, Torumkuney
Thirumalaisamy, P Velavan
Andreas, Voss
Source :
Journal of Antimicrobial Chemotherapy
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Oxford University Press, 2020.

Abstract

Background The outpatient setting is a key scenario for the implementation of antimicrobial stewardship (AMS) activities, considering that overconsumption of antibiotics occurs mainly outside hospitals. This publication is the result of a joint initiative by the JPIAMR ARCH and COMBACTE-MAGNET EPI-Net networks, which is aimed at formulating a set of target actions for linking surveillance data with AMS activities in the outpatient setting. Methods A scoping review of the literature was carried out in three research areas: AMS leadership and accountability; antimicrobial usage and AMS; antimicrobial resistance and AMS. Consensus on the actions was reached through a RAND-modified Delphi process involving over 40 experts in infectious diseases, clinical microbiology, AMS, veterinary medicine or public health, from 18 low-, middle- and high-income countries. Results Evidence was retrieved from 38 documents, and an initial 25 target actions were proposed, differentiating between essential or desirable targets according to clinical relevance, feasibility and applicability to settings and resources. In the first consultation round, preliminary agreement was reached for all targets. Further to a second review, 6 statements were re-considered and 3 were deleted, leading to a final list of 22 target actions in the form of a practical checklist. Conclusions This White Paper is a pragmatic and flexible tool to guide the development of calibrated surveillance-based AMS interventions specific to the outpatient setting, which is characterized by substantial inter- and intra-country variability in the organization of healthcare structures, maintaining a global perspective and taking into account the feasibility of the target actions in low-resource settings.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
14602091 and 03057453
Volume :
75
Issue :
Suppl 2
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Antimicrobial Chemotherapy
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....33f77e83f63225d3f4beaf7adc2770cd