Hospital Staff Usually Blame Others for Overprescribing Antibiotics, Study Suggests

Recent survey findings showed although hospital faculty jointly recognize the need to appropriately prescribe medication in order to prevent resistance to antibiotics, faculty members were more likely to blame inappropriate antibiotic use to others and not themselves, according to research published in Infection Control and Hospital Epidemiology.

For their study, researchers conducted a survey of 280 residents and 329 faculty at Jackson Memorial Hospital, a teaching hospital in Miami. The survey included questions regarding their perceptions and attitudes toward antibiotic use and resistance.

Survey responses showed residents were much more likely to feel "reassured" when prescribing an antibiotic to patients, even if there was a likelihood the administration was wrong. Altogether, more than a third of respondents said the risk of a C. diff infection did not influence whether or not they prescribed an antibiotic.

Read the study about hospital staff perceptions and attitudes toward antibiotics.

Related Articles on Antibiotics:
Study: Age, Antibiotic Prophylaxis Not Significant Risk Factors for MRSA Infection
Vancomycin Dominates as First-Line Defense Against MRSA Infections
Study: Antibiotic Linezolid an Effective Treatment for MRSA Infection

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