How a Utah Health System Combats Superbugs

Photos show how Intermountain Healthcare’s urgent care network practices antibiotic stewardship

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How a Utah Health System Combats Superbugs

Overuse of antibiotics accelerates the emergence of resistance and puts patients at risk. Still, 1 in 3 antibiotics prescribed in doctors’ offices, emergency rooms, and other outpatient settings in the United States are unnecessary.

This inappropriate antibiotic prescribing varies by type of health care facility. According to one study that looked at urgent care centers, nearly half of patients diagnosed with common conditions such as asthma, bronchitis, and the common cold—for which antibiotics are neither recommended nor effective—receive an antibiotic prescription anyway.  

Utah
Eddie Stenehjem, center, serves as antibiotic stewardship medical director for Intermountain Healthcare in Utah. Here, he consults with Adam Hersh (left), a University of Utah researcher, and Park Willis, an urgent care doctor, on how Intermountain can optimize the use of antibiotics in its urgent care clinics.
Courtesy of Intermountain Healthcare

Health care facilities are working to combat resistant infections and improve patient outcomes through implementation of antibiotic stewardship programs. One organization making significant strides is Intermountain Healthcare, a health system based in Salt Lake City that includes 24 hospitals, over 180 office practices, home care, and telehealth.  

Utah
Antibiotic stewardship posters are displayed at Intermountain Healthcare’s urgent care clinics.
Courtesy of Intermountain Healthcare

Dr. Eddie Stenehjem serves as antibiotic stewardship medical director for Intermountain Healthcare. As part of the system’s effort, Stenehjem and his team created posters communicating the organization’s commitment to providing the best care possible, including the importance of using antibiotics only when they benefit the patient. The posters are displayed outside urgent care clinics and inside patient rooms. Research shows that such public commitments help to improve antibiotic use because they keep the pledge easily visible to doctors and patients.

Utah
Urgent care doctor Park Willis has become a leader in judicious use of antibiotics at Intermountain Healthcare facilities. With an online dashboard tool that is part of the stewardship program, he and other physicians can easily view their own antibiotic prescribing rates as well as those of their peers.
Courtesy of Intermountain Healthcare

Intermountain urgent care doctors can access a dashboard tool that displays their antibiotic prescribing rates for acute respiratory conditions as well as the prescribing rates of other doctors and clinics throughout the system. Studies show that such peer comparisons can motivate physicians to change prescribing behaviors.

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Open communication among doctors, administrators, and health care staff helps ensure the Intermountain stewardship program’s success because it develops a broad understanding of the importance of improving antibiotic use and how to make the best use of the available data.
Courtesy of Intermountain Healthcare

Dr. Park Willis, the urgent care system’s lowest antibiotic prescriber, regularly speaks to other Intermountain Healthcare colleagues about how to use the dashboard and what strategies work best when talking to patients about antibiotics. These conversations help keep the issues surrounding overuse of antibiotics front and center and encourages others to take advantage of the system’s available tools.

Utah
By working to improve antibiotic use in Intermountain Healthcare’s urgent care centers, Stenehjem hopes to reduce the spread of antibiotic-resistant bacteria.
Courtesy of Intermountain Healthcare

Similarly, Stenehjem, as antibiotic stewardship medical director, routinely talks to doctors and patients about what they need. Intermountain’s stewardship team used this approach to design a program—launched in the summer of 2019—tailored to the urgent care community it serves. The system is already seeing positive results in improved antibiotic prescribing.

All photos used with permission from Intermountain Healthcare

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A longtime urgent care physician, Park Willis has seen firsthand the overprescribing of antibiotics in these settings. In his work with the Intermountain Healthcare system, based in Salt Lake City, Willis has long had an interest in ensuring these drugs are used appropriately. To him, that goal just “felt like it was good patient care.”

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