Journal Article
Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
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Underestimation of Clostridium difficile infection among clinicians: an international survey.

The objective of this investigation was to document clinicians' awareness regarding the incidence and severity of Clostridium difficile-associated diarrhea (CDAD). An international electronic survey was conducted among corresponding authors of articles indexed by PubMed and published during the last 10 years in 'Core Clinical Journals'. A total of 1,163 clinicians answered (response rate 59%); most of the responses were submitted from North America (54.6%), Europe (32.2%), and Asia/Pacific (11.6%). Only 2.2% of the participants answered correctly all four questions, while 14.1% answered all questions incorrectly. Regarding each question, 10.8% of the participants correctly estimated current CDAD treatment failure or recurrence rates to be around 40%, 33.4% correctly estimated the ratio of antibiotic-associated colitis attributed to C. difficile to be around 60%, 72.7% correctly responded that almost all antibiotics are associated with CDAD, and 41.7% correctly responded that any patient is at risk for CDAD. Almost half (44.4%) of the respondents considered CDAD to be underestimated. Participants from North America scored higher than those from Europe or Asia/Pacific (p < 0.001). Participants considering CDAD to be overestimated (3.4%) had the lowest mean score of correct answers. Among a clinically diverse international sample of physicians with academic expertise, there was an inadequate level of awareness of the magnitude and clinical importance of CDAD.

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