A Learning Collaborative to Improve Antibiotic Use for Otitis Media and Pharyngitis in Pediatric Urgent Care Clinics.

Document Type

Article

Publication Date

12-1-2025

Identifier

DOI: 10.1097/PEC.0000000000003481

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To increase the percentage of first-line antibiotics prescribed for acute otitis media (AOM) and pharyngitis, the percentage of treated pharyngitis with a positive group A streptococcus (GAS) test, and the percentage of nonsevere AOM patients prescribed delayed antibiotics in pediatric urgent care clinics (UCCs).

METHODS: The American Academy of Pediatrics Section on Urgent Care Medicine and Pediatric Acute and Critical Care Quality Network developed a multicenter quality improvement collaborative. We used national guidelines to determine criteria for nonsevere AOM and first-line antibiotics for AOM and pharyngitis. Participating UCCs committed at least 3 clinicians to submit 10 encounters for each diagnosis per month during the intervention period (October 2022 to June 2023). Clinicians signed commitment letters, participated in monthly learning sessions, and tested UCC-selected interventions.

RESULTS: We recruited 84 participants from 13 UCCs. Participants submitted 5017 AOM encounters and 3762 pharyngitis encounters. The use of first-line antibiotics for AOM and GAS pharyngitis remained stable at 75.7% and 79.9%, respectively, throughout the project. The documentation of delayed antibiotic criteria increased from a range of 26%-27% at baseline to 83% [5.42% per month (95% CI: 4.03-6.81)]. This corresponded to an increase in use of delayed antibiotics for AOM from a range of 32%-42% at baseline to 70% by the end of the intervention period [2.53% per month (95% CI: 0.57-4.48)]. Rates of GAS testing before treating pharyngitis increased during baseline and remained high (>96%) throughout the intervention period.

CONCLUSIONS: This multicenter collaborative provided education and networking to increase the use of delayed antibiotics for AOM in pediatric UCCs.

Journal Title

Pediatric emergency care

Volume

41

Issue

12

First Page

218

Last Page

226

MeSH Keywords

Child; Child, Preschool; Female; Humans; Infant; Male; Ambulatory Care Facilities; Anti-Bacterial Agents; Otitis Media; Pharyngitis; Practice Patterns, Physicians'; Quality Improvement; Streptococcal Infections; Streptococcus pyogenes; Practice Guidelines as Topic

PubMed ID

40926417

Keywords

amoxicillin; antibiotic stewardship; delayed antibiotics; diagnostic stewardship; quality improvement; safety net antibiotic prescriptions

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