MEDICATIONS: GIVING ANTIBIOTICS WITHIN
FOUR HOURS OF ARRIVAL AT A HOSPITAL IMPROVES OUTCOMES FOR OLDER PATIENTS WITH
PNEUMONIA
March 22, 2004 — Giving older patients antibiotics within four hours of their
arrival at a hospital for treatment of pneumonia reduces the length of hospital
stay, and may reduce the chances of dying, according to an article in the March
22 issue of The Archives of Internal Medicine, a journal of the American
Medical Association.
According to the article, pneumonia is the second leading reason for
hospitalization among Medicare beneficiaries, accounting for more than 600,000
Medicare hospitalizations yearly, and is the fifth leading cause of death among
Americans older than 65 years. Timely administration of antibiotics to
hospitalized patients with pneumonia has been associated with improved survival,
the article states. Guidelines recommend antibiotic treatment within eight hours
of arrival at a hospital.
Peter M. Houck, M.D., from the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services,
Seattle, and colleagues investigated whether administration of antibiotics
within less than eight hours of arrival at the hospital was associated with
significant improvements in hospitalized patients with pneumonia who had not
been treated prior to arriving at the hospital.
The researchers examined medical records from a national random sample of
18,209 Medicare patients older than 65 years who were hospitalized with
pneumonia from July 1998 through March 1999.
Among the 13,771 (75.6 percent) of patients who did not receive any treatment
prior to their arrival at a hospital, antibiotic administration within four
hours of arrival was associated with reduced death in the hospital (6.8 percent
vs. 7.4 percent), reduced likelihood of dying within 30 days of admission to the
hospital (11.6 percent vs. 12.7 percent) and reduced likelihood that the length
of stay (LOS) at the hospital exceeded 5 days (42.1 percent vs. 45.1 percent).
The average length of stay was an average of about half a day shorter for
patients who received antibiotics within four hours of arriving at the hospital.
The researchers also found that 60.9 percent of all patients received
antibiotics within four hours of arriving at a hospital.
"The results of this study suggest that initial administration of antibiotics
within four hours of arrival at the hospital is associated with reduced
mortality among those patients who have not received antibiotics as outpatients
and reduced hospital LOS among all patients," write the authors. "While most
Medicare inpatients with pneumonia already receive antibiotics within that time,
a substantial proportion do not. Given the growing size of the Medicare
population, any additional improvement in administration timing could prevent a
substantial number of deaths each year and preserve health care resources."
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