She hopes the telemedicine approach catches on more widely, which would help minimize the multitude of problems linked to penicillin allergy labels.
“Patients that avoid penicillin, they’re on more costly second-line antibiotics that are, in general, less effective, depending on which infection you’re talking about,” Dr. Ramsey said. “The [second-line antibiotics] have more side effects. And there’s data to show that patients with [a] penicillin allergy label have longer hospital stays, more costly hospital stays, are at risk for more resistant infections. And it breeds antimicrobial resistance in the long-term.”
Dr. Ramsey had no relevant financial disclosures.
SOURCE: Ramsey AC et al. AAAAI/WAO Joint Congress, Abstract 104.
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