# Shortening treatment duration for uncomplicated community acquired pneumonia to align with best practice guidelines in a large academic paediatric emergency department

**Authors:** Ryan E.St. Pierre-Hetz, Brielle Stanton Skotnicki, Christine R. Aspiotes, Brett McAninch, Johanna R. Rosen

PMC · DOI: 10.1016/j.fhj.2024.100142 · 2024-05-07

## TL;DR

This study successfully increased the use of 5-day antibiotic treatment for pneumonia in children, aligning with updated guidelines.

## Contribution

A successful quality improvement strategy to shift clinical practice to shorter antibiotic courses for pediatric pneumonia.

## Key findings

- Educational and feedback interventions increased 5-day prescriptions from 3% to 85% in 12 months.
- No significant increase in ED return visits was observed, suggesting no rise in treatment failure.
- The project demonstrated effective implementation of updated antibiotic guidelines in a pediatric ED.

## Abstract

Recommendations for antibiotic therapy for community acquired pneumonia recently changed from 10-day to 5-day duration. This quality improvement project aimed to change the practice of providers in an urban, free-standing children's hospital paediatric emergency department in the United States to match the updated recommendations. Improvement interventions included educational outreach, data sharing, on-site reminders, and audit-and-feedback. The project included analysis of ED return visits to monitor possible treatment failure. Interventions successfully increased 5-day antibiotic prescription rate from 3% to 85% within 12 months.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** community acquired pneumonia (MESH:D003147)

## Figures

1 figure with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11126758/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11126758