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The appropriateness of hospital antimicrobial use between medical and surgical specialties
Inappropriate antimicrobial use among hospitalized patients has been well documented with values from 39%-74%.1-3 Since the use of antimicrobials is not restricted to any specific specialty as, for example, chemotherapy is to oncologists, all physicians have the potential to misuse antimicrobials. B...
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Published in: | Formulary (Cleveland, Ohio) Ohio), 2004-06, Vol.39 (6), p.304 |
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creator | Arnold, Forest W McDonald, L. Clifford Mangino, Paul D Dobbs, Stacey L Ramirez, Julio A |
description | Inappropriate antimicrobial use among hospitalized patients has been well documented with values from 39%-74%.1-3 Since the use of antimicrobials is not restricted to any specific specialty as, for example, chemotherapy is to oncologists, all physicians have the potential to misuse antimicrobials. Based upon this presumption, inappropriate antimicrobial use is likely to be distributed among a variety of medical and surgical specialties. |
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subjects | Anti-infective agents Antimicrobial agents Compliance Dosage and administration Drug dosages Hospitals Internal medicine Intervention Medicine Nosocomial infections Pathogens Patient safety Physicians Pneumonia Prescription drugs Studies Surgeons Surgery |
title | The appropriateness of hospital antimicrobial use between medical and surgical specialties |
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