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Article
Unwarranted variability in antibiotic prophylaxis for cesarean section delivery: a national survey of anesthesiologists.
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  • Karthik Raghunathan, MD, Baystate Health
  • Neil Connelly, MD, Baystate Health
  • Jennifer Friderici, Baystate Health
  • Deborah Naglieri-Prescod, Baystate Health
  • Ryan Joyce, MD, Baystate Health
  • Praveen Prasanna, MD, Baystate Health
  • Nandakumar Ponnusamy, MD, Baystate Health
Document Type
Article, Peer-reviewed
Publication Date
3-1-2013
Abstract

BACKGROUND:

Current guidelines from the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists recommend antibiotic prophylaxis for cesarean delivery immediately before incision. The purpose of this study was to measure and describe correlates of adherence to these guidelines in a sample of United States anesthesiologists. METHODS:

We invited a random sample of the membership of the American Society of Anesthesiologists (n = 10,000) to complete an online survey. RESULTS:

Of 1052 respondents (10.5%) with complete information for analysis, 63.5% (95% confidence interval 60.6%, 66.3%, n = 668) reported preincision prophylaxis as the standard of care for scheduled cesarean delivery. Twenty-eight percent (n = 299) agreed that the anesthesiologist should take primary responsibility for prophylaxis timing. In a multivariable model, significant variability in preincision prophylaxis was noted for hospital type (community versus teaching, 62% vs 70%, P = 0.004), region (West versus Southeast, 70% vs 59%, P = 0.01; West versus Southwest, 70% vs 58%, P = 0.02), and respondents' belief in appropriate preincision timing (those endorsing routine preincision administration [80%], routine after cord clamp administration [17%], at the discretion of the obstetrician [47%], and the belief that more information was needed [43%]) (P < 0.001 all comparisons). Respondents' belief about appropriate preincision timing was the strongest discriminator in the model (change in area under the receiver operating characteristic curve = 0.13 vs ≤0.02 for all others). CONCLUSION:

Adherence with current prophylactic antibiotic administration guidelines for cesarean delivery is not uniform. Education initiatives, regulatory maneuvers, and process improvement should be targeted at sites where anesthesiologists do not comply with current guidelines.

Citation Information
Raghunathan K, Connelly NR, Friderici J, Naglieri-Prescod D, Joyce R, Prasanna P, Ponnusamy N. Unwarranted variability in antibiotic prophylaxis for cesarean section delivery: a national survey of anesthesiologists. Anesth Analg. 2013 Mar;116(3):644-8.