# P-871. Can We Change What We Do Not Measure? Antibiotic Prescribing Patterns in Wisconsin’s Urgent Care Centers in 2022

**Authors:** Sura AlMahasis, James H Ford, David Mott, Lindsay Taylor

PMC · DOI: 10.1093/ofid/ofaf695.1079 · 2026-01-11

## TL;DR

This study analyzed antibiotic prescriptions in Wisconsin urgent care centers in 2022 to identify patterns and potential areas for improvement in antibiotic stewardship.

## Contribution

The study provides a detailed characterization of antibiotic prescribing patterns in urgent care centers, highlighting key providers and conditions.

## Key findings

- A small percentage of providers prescribed the majority of antibiotics, suggesting targeted interventions could be effective.
- The top five antibiotics prescribed accounted for over 70% of all prescriptions.
- Nearly 40% of prescriptions were for Tier 3 conditions, indicating potential overuse.

## Abstract

Urgent care centers (UCCs) are a fast-growing outpatient healthcare model due to their convenience and affordability; however, most UCCs lack formal antimicrobial stewardship (AMS) programs. Characterizing antibiotic prescribing is essential for identifying improvement targets. This study examined 2022 antibiotic prescribing patterns in Wisconsin’s UCCs to inform future AMS efforts.

We conducted a retrospective analysis of 2022 antibiotic prescriptions at UCCs using all-payer claims data from the Wisconsin Health Information Organization. Our cohort included patients who filled ≥ 1 oral antibiotic prescription on or within 3 days of a UCC visit. ICD-10 diagnosis codes were used to identify the indications and grouped into antibiotic appropriateness tiers. Patient characteristics included sex, age, payer type, and region. We used the prescriber national provider identifier (NPI) taxonomy to categorize provider types. Data were curated and analyzed in SAS 9.4 using descriptive statistics.

The study cohort included 39,546 patients who collectively filled 50,385 antibiotic prescriptions after being seen at one of 388 UCCs in Wisconsin. Of the patients, 61.0% were female, 32.1% were aged 2-12, 55.1% were insured by Medicaid, and nearly half lived in the southern region of Wisconsin (Table 1). The median number of prescriptions per UCC was 24 (IQR: 4.0-87.0), and just 10% of providers (303/3,027) accounted for around 80.0% of all antibiotic prescriptions (n= 40,169). Nurse practitioners prescribed the most (20.5%), followed by family medicine physicians (19.9%) and physician assistants (Figure 1). Over 70.0% of prescriptions were for 5 antibiotics: amoxicillin (28.5%), amoxicillin/clavulanate (22.3%), cephalexin (11.1%), cefdinir (6.4%), and azithromycin (4.5%) (Table 2). The 3 most common associated conditions were otitis media (12.3%), acute pharyngitis (4.7%), and acute sinusitis (3.8%). Nearly 40% of prescriptions were for Tier 3 conditions (Figure 2).

A minority of UCC providers prescribed the majority of antibiotics, suggesting targeted provider feedback may be a successful stewardship intervention in Wisconsin UCCs. Future studies should incorporate additional prescribing metrics to further guide AMS efforts in UCCs.

All Authors: No reported disclosures

## Linked entities

- **Chemicals:** amoxicillin (PubChem CID 33613), amoxicillin/clavulanate (PubChem CID 6435924), cephalexin (PubChem CID 27447), cefdinir (PubChem CID 6915944), azithromycin (PubChem CID 447043)
- **Diseases:** otitis media (MONDO:0005441), acute pharyngitis (MONDO:0002258)

## Figures

4 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12792803/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12792803