01. ID Resources and General Principles in Management of ID

For antibiotic management, refer to UCSF Infectious Diseases Management Program guidelines (available on AgileMD for UCSF), the Johns Hopkins Guide to Antibiotics (http://hopkins-abxguide.org/), the Infectious Diseases Society of America Guidelines (http://www.idsociety.org/Content.aspx?id=9088), or the Sanford Guide to Antimicrobial Therapy

Other high-yield resources and guidelines:

General Principles in the Management of Infectious Diseases

  • Broad spectrum antibiotics are appropriate for empiric therapy but narrow your antibiotics when you have identified a pathogen
  • Have a low threshold to start empiric antibiotic therapy in immunocompromised patients; they may not mount a fever or leukocytosis and may show only limited localizing signs and symptoms of infection (e.g. minimal abdominal pain in the setting of a perforation)
  • Differentiate community-acquired and healthcare-associated infections -- the pathogens (and your empiric therapy) may be different
  • Know your local antibiogram to help determine empiric therapy; use the UCSF IDMP website
  • Obtain cultures (blood, urine, CSF, etc..) before starting antibiotics, when possible; whenever ordering a urine culture, always order a UA with micro as well.
  • Try not to obtain cultures from only a central line, except to compare to your peripheral cultures.
  • Give some time for your antibiotic therapy to work, clinical improvement is not immediate and can take days in certain disease states
  • Use resources above plus your infectious diseases physicians and infectious diseases pharmacists to provide the best care for your patients

Key words: antibiotics