Conference Coverage

Prehospital antibiotics improved some aspects of sepsis care


 

REPORTING FROM CCC47


“In part, due to the relatively short response times in the Netherlands, we don’t know if there are other countries with longer response times that would have other results, and whether they should use antibiotics in their ambulances,” Dr. Nanayakkara said in his presentation.

The study was the first-ever prospective randomized, controlled open-label trial to compare early prehospital antibiotics with standard care.

Before the study was started, EMS personnel at 10 large regional ambulance services serving 34 secondary or tertiary hospitals were trained in recognizing sepsis, the report says.

A total of 2,672 patients with suspected sepsis were included in the intention-to-treat analysis, of whom 1,535 were randomized to receive prehospital antibiotics and 1,137 to usual EMS care, which consisted of fluid resuscitation and supplementary oxygen.

Pages

Recommended Reading

VIDEO: Dual antibiotic prophylaxis cuts cesarean SSIs
MDedge Family Medicine
Postsurgical antibiotics cut infection in obese women after C-section
MDedge Family Medicine
Reported penicillin allergies hike inpatient costs
MDedge Family Medicine
Preoperative penicillin allergy tests could decrease SSI
MDedge Family Medicine