| Literature DB >> 27029315 |
Carl Llor1, Lars Bjerrum2, Eva Lena Strandberg3, Ruta Radzeviciene4, Anatoliy Reutskiy5, Lidia Caballero6.
Abstract
A total of 59,535 patients with respiratory tract infections were registered in the Happy Audit project, an audit-based, before-and-after study conducted in primary care centres of six countries (Argentina, Denmark, Lithuania, Russia, Spain, and Sweden) in 2008 and 2009. An antibiotic was explicitly requested by the patient in 1,255 cases (2.1%), with a great variation across countries ranging from 0.4%-4.9%. Antibiotics were significantly more often prescribed to patients requesting them compared to those who did not (64% vs. 28%; p < 0.001). Patients with acute exacerbations of chronic bronchitis/chronic obstructive pulmonary disease were most likely to request antibiotics while those with common colds were least likely (3.9% vs. 1.2%, respectively). The presence of tonsillar exudates and dyspnoea were more commonly associated with a demand for antibiotics. Even though physicians very often perceive that patients demand an antibiotic, the results of this study clearly show that patients only request antibiotics in a low percentage of cases. Patients were most likely to request antibiotics when they had symptoms of lower respiratory tract infections and when they came with more severe symptoms. Furthermore, there were considerable differences between countries, suggesting that the different backgrounds and traditions largely explain this variability in patients' requests for antibiotics.Entities:
Keywords: antibiotics; audit; demand; respiratory tract infections
Year: 2013 PMID: 27029315 PMCID: PMC4790264 DOI: 10.3390/antibiotics2040477
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Antibiotics (Basel) ISSN: 2079-6382
Figure 1Patients with a demand for antibiotics in the Happy Audit study in relation to country.
Characteristics of the group of patients (n = 59,535) with respiratory tract infections included in the Happy Audit study and the group of patients that explicitly requested antibiotics.
| All patients with respiratory tract infections, n (%) | Patients that explicitly requested antibiotics, n (%; 95% CI) | |
|---|---|---|
| Gender | ||
| - Male | 26,157 (43.9) | 561 (2.1; 2.2–2.3) |
| - Female | 33,378 (56.1) | 694 (2.1; 1.9–2.2) |
| Symptoms and signs | ||
| - Fever | 25,735 (43.2) | 710 (2.8; 2.6–3.0) |
| - Cough | 44,447 (74.7) | 934 (2.1; 2–2.2) |
| - Purulent ear discharge | 1,280 (2.1) | 34 (2.7; 1.8–3.5) |
| - Painful swallowing | 20,981 (35.2) | 565 (2.7; 2.5–2.9) |
| - Tonsillar exudates | 4,143 (7.0) | 203 (4.9; 4.2–5.6) |
| - Tender cervical glands | 4,857 (8.2) | 191 (3.9; 3.4–4.5) |
| - Dyspnoea | 5,592 (9.4) | 222 (4.0; 3.5–4.5) |
| - Increased sputum production | 9,947 (16.7) | 320 (3.2; 2.9–3.6) |
| - Purulent sputum | 4,466 (7.5) | 133 (3.0; 2.5–3.5) |
| Aetiology suspected by the physician | ||
| - Viral aetiology | 41,338 (69.5) | 805 (1.9; 1.8–2.1) |
| - Bacterial aetiology | 14,552 (24.4) | 373 (2.6; 2.3–2.8) |
| Diagnosis | ||
| - Common cold | 22,151 (37.2) | 265 (1.2; 1.1–1.3) |
| - Acute otitis media | 2,112 (3.5) | 51 (2.4; 1.8–3.1) |
| - Acute sinusitis | 1,945 (3.3) | 32 (1.6; 1.1–2.2) |
| - Acute pharyngitis | 7,241 (12.2) | 189 (2.6; 2.2–3.0) |
| - Acute tonsillitis | 4,643 (7.8) | 149 (3.2; 2.7–3.7) |
| - Acute bronchitis | 6,935 (11.6) | 243 (3.5; 3.1–3.9) |
| - Pneumonia | 2,063 (3.5) | 26 (1.3; 0.7–1.7) |
| - Exacerbations of CB/COPD | 2,073 (3.5) | 80 (3.9; 3.0–4.7) |
| - Influenza | 5,469 (9.2) | 105 (1.9; 1.6–2.3) |
| - Other respiratory tract infections | 3,959 (6.6) | 95 (2.4; 1.9–2.9) |
CI = confidence interval; CB = chronic bronchitis; COPD = chronic obstructive pulmonary disease.