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. 2018 Nov 15;74(2):515–520. doi: 10.1093/jac/dky447

Table 2.

Patient/prescription characteristics and appropriateness

Characteristic Appropriate, n/N (%) Inappropriate, n/N (%) Percentage difference for inappropriate prescribing (95% CI)
Age, years
 <18 145/188 (77.1) 43/188 (22.9) 14.1% (7.2–21.0)
 ≥18 495/785 (63.1) 290/785 (36.9)
Gender
 female 316/474 (66.7) 158/474 (33.3) 1.7% (−4.2–7.7)
 male 324/499 (64.9) 175/499 (35.1)
Patient disposition
 discharged 203/306 (66.3) 103/306 (33.7) 0.8% (−5.6–7.2)
 admitted 437/667 (65.5) 230/667 (34.5)
Triage category
 1 23/42 (54.8) 19/42 (45.2) 11.2% (−5.3–27.7)
 2 108/167 (64.7) 59/167 (35.3) 1.3% (−8.6–11.2)
 3 385/576 (66.8) 191/576 (33.2) 0.9% (−6.9–8.7)
 4/5 124/188 (66.0) 64/188 (34.0) (reference)
SIRS criteria meta?
 yes 134/196 (68.4) 62/196 (31.6) 6.9% (−1.0–14.8)
 no 279/454 (61.5) 175/454 (38.5)
qSOFA criteria meta?
 yes 13/30 (43.3) 17/30 (56.7) 20.5% (2.4–38.7)
 no 396/620 (63.9) 224/620 (36.1)
Reason for antibiotic administration
 treatment 541/812 (66.6) 271/812 (33.4) 5.1% (−3.1–13.3)
 prophylaxis 99/161 (61.5) 62/161 (38.5)
Time that antibiotic was prescribed
 day shift 374/559 (66.9) 185/559 (33.1) 0.6% (−7.3–8.5)
 night shift 120/181 (66.3) 61/181 (33.7)

Values in bold indicate statistical significance.

a

SIRS and qSOFA criteria were only applied to patients over the age of 18 years who were prescribed antibiotics to treat presumed infection.