Online course

Antimicrobials: catheter-associated urinary tract infections

Treat a hospitalised patient for a catheter-associated urinary tract infection.

New version released August 2019 to align with the revised and updated Therapeutic Guidelines: Antibiotic.

  • Cost: free

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Antimicrobials: catheter-associated urinary tract infections
 

Accreditation

 

About

Developed in collaboration with the Australian Commission on Safety and Quality in Health Care (ACSQHC), this module deals with antimicrobials prescribing in a hospital setting.

In this case, you are an intern working on a medical inpatient unit at a metropolitan hospital. You are rostered for after-hours ward coverage of medical patients. You are called to see a patient by a nurse on the cardiology ward on the evening of his third hospital day because he is confused and has a temperature of 38.9°C.

Mr Wilson is an independent 72-year-old man who was admitted to hospital for an exacerbation of chronic heart failure (CHF) on a background of rate-controlled atrial fibrillation and a previous myocardial infarction. For three days prior to admission, he has noticed decreased exercise tolerance and had been waking up at night with shortness of breath.