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Efforts to regulate antibiotic misuse in hospitals: A history

Powel Kazanjian

2021Infection Control and Hospital Epidemiology15 citationsDOI

Abstract

Today, most hospitals have implemented regulatory programs designed to curtail the antimicrobial misuse that has fueled resistance. In this paper, I trace the history of resistance and efforts to mitigate antibiotic overuse in the hospital. Medical investigators in the 1950s argued that the difficulties posed by resistant bacteria in the hospital were even more worrisome than the problems that antibiotics were intended to solve. These investigators sought to reform physician habits that they believed, left unchecked, would accelerate resistance and hasten the end of the antibiotic era. When their methods of education failed to change physician's prescribing habits voluntarily, external restrictions were imposed. Today's antimicrobial stewardship programs represent the newest version of a series of efforts that began in the mid-twentieth century to reform antibiotic misuse and to control resistant microbes in the hospital.

Topics & Concepts

Antibiotic resistanceResistance (ecology)MedicineAntibioticsAntimicrobial stewardshipAntibiotic StewardshipStewardship (theology)Infection controlIntensive care medicineMedical emergencyPolitical scienceLawMicrobiologyEcologyPoliticsBiologyAntibiotic Use and ResistanceComplementary and Alternative Medicine StudiesPatient Satisfaction in Healthcare
Efforts to regulate antibiotic misuse in hospitals: A history | Litcius