| Literature DB >> 15705321 |
Edward A Belongia1, Burney Kieke, Ruth Lynfield, Jeffrey P Davis, Richard E Besser.
Abstract
Media reports suggested increased public demand for anthrax prophylaxis after the intentional anthrax cases in 2001, but the magnitude of anthrax-related prescribing in unaffected regions was not assessed. We surveyed a random sample of 400 primary care clinicians in Minnesota and Wisconsin to assess requests for and provision of anthrax-related antimicrobial agents. The survey was returned by 239 (60%) of clinicians, including 210 in outpatient practice. Fifty-eight (28%) of those in outpatient practice received requests for anthrax-related antimicrobial agents, and 9 (4%) dispensed them. Outpatient fluoroquinolone use in both states was also analyzed with regression models to compare predicted and actual use in October and November 2001. Fluoroquinolone use as a proportion of total antimicrobial use was not elevated, and anthrax concerns accounted for an estimated 0.3% of all fluoroquinolone prescriptions. Most physicians in Minnesota and Wisconsin managed anthrax-related requests without dispensing antimicrobial agents.Entities:
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Year: 2005 PMID: 15705321 PMCID: PMC3294341 DOI: 10.3201/eid1101.040272
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Emerg Infect Dis ISSN: 1080-6040 Impact factor: 6.883
Characteristics of Minnesota and Wisconsin clinicians who received requests for antimicrobial agents to prevent anthrax during the last quarter of 2001
| Received requests (%) | p value | |
|---|---|---|
| Prescriber type | ||
| Physician | 52/157 (33) | <0.001 |
| Nonphysician | 6/52 (12) | |
| Practice location | ||
| Metropolitan area | 22/82 (27) | 0.82 |
| Nonmetropolitan area | 36/128 (28) | |
| State | ||
| Minnesota | 29/105 (28) | 1.0 |
| Wisconsin | 29/105 (28) | |
| Physician specialty* | ||
| Family practice | 26/62 (41) | 0.61 |
| Internal medicine | 14/42 (30) | |
| Pediatrics | 8/28 (28) | |
| Emergency medicine | 2/5 (33) |
*Nine physicians who listed 2 specialties and 2 who listed “other” as a specialty were excluded from the frequency distribution for physician specialty.
Figure 1A) Actual and predicted fluoroquinolone prescriptions, January 2000 through December 2002. B) Actual and predicted fluoroquinolone prescriptions as a percentage of all outpatient antibiotic prescriptions, January 2000 through December 2002. Tetracycline and related antimicrobial agents were excluded from the denominator in each month. Vertical bars show 95% confidence intervals. All models included categorical effects for year and month and indicator variables for October, November, and December, 2001
Figure 2A) Retail distribution of fluoroquinolone antimicrobial agents, January 1999 through December 2002. Volume was measured in kilograms. B) Actual and predicted retail distribution of fluoroquinolone antimicrobial agents as a percentage of total antibiotic volume distribution (excluding tetracyclines), January 1999 through December 2002. Vertical bars show 95% confidence intervals.
Figure 3Actual and predicted tetracycline group prescriptions as a percentage of all outpatient antimicrobial prescriptions (excluding fluoroquinolones), January 2000 through December 2002. Vertical bars show 95% confidence intervals.