Prevalence of antimicrobial empirical therapy & its consequences in Health Care centre of Pakistan: A Cross Sectional Study

Authors

  • Maria Ayub Faculty of Pharmacy, Jinnah University for Women, Karachi 74600, Pakistan
  • Amna Islam Faculty of Pharmacy, Jinnah University for Women, Karachi 74600, Pakistan
  • Soofia Islam Faculty of Pharmacy, Jinnah University for Women, Karachi 74600, Pakistan
  • Qurat Ul Ain Riaz Faculty of Pharmacy, Jinnah University for Women, Karachi 74600, Pakistan
  • Sana Jalil Faculty of Pharmacy, Jinnah University for Women, Karachi 74600, Pakistan
  • Asiya Batool Faculty of Pharmacy, Jinnah University for Women, Karachi 74600, Pakistan

Keywords:

empirical therapy, its prevalence, antibiotics, resistance, CS test, prescribing pattern

Abstract

Empirical therapy is the therapy based on experience and, more specifically, therapy begun on the basis of a clinical educated guess in the absence of complete or perfect information. Drugs used as empiric therapy usually have broad spectrum but once the pathogen of illness has been diagnose the narrow spectrum antibiotic should be use which is effective against that particular type of pathogen. In this study we aimed to know about the most prevalent trend of empirical therapy in Pakistan by different physicians and their attitude towards treating the patient. For the purpose of this study different wards and OPDs were visited and relatively 100 of the prescriptions and case histories were observed to come to know about the different consequences in which the empirical therapy is use most commonly. Nearly only 39% of the physicians out of 100 % recommend culture sensitive testing to patients. Augmentin is the most commonly used empiric drug (26%) after that ciprofloxacin (15%) and erythromycin (8%) use commonly. Patients experience a varieties of side effects by the use of empiric drugs like sedation (38%), nausea (30%) etc. After careful consideration it was concluded that ancoherent practices prevalence have been raising dangerously which needs careful review by health authorities.

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Published

2015-08-01

How to Cite

Maria Ayub, Amna Islam, Soofia Islam, Qurat Ul Ain Riaz, Sana Jalil, & Asiya Batool. (2015). Prevalence of antimicrobial empirical therapy & its consequences in Health Care centre of Pakistan: A Cross Sectional Study. World Journal of Pharmaceutical Sciences, 3(8), 1661–1667. Retrieved from https://wjpsonline.com/index.php/wjps/article/view/prevalence-antimicrobial-empirical-therapy-pakistan

Issue

Section

Research Article