| Literature DB >> 27601499 |
Emma Barry1, Kirsty O'Brien1, Frank Moriarty1, Janine Cooper2, Patrick Redmond1, Carmel M Hughes2, Kathleen Bennett1, Tom Fahey1, Susan M Smith1.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: There is limited evidence regarding the quality of prescribing for children in primary care. Several prescribing criteria (indicators) have been developed to assess the appropriateness of prescribing in older and middle-aged adults but few are relevant to children. The objective of this study was to develop a set of prescribing indicators that can be applied to prescribing or dispensing data sets to determine the prevalence of potentially inappropriate prescribing in children (PIPc) in primary care settings.Entities:
Keywords: Delphi method; children; explicit criteria; potentially inappropriate prescribing; prescribing indicators
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27601499 PMCID: PMC5020844 DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2016-012079
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Open ISSN: 2044-6055 Impact factor: 2.692
Figure 1Flow diagram potentially inappropriate prescribing in children (PIPc) Study.
Progression of indicators through the Delphi process
| Indicator | Round 1 | Outcome | Revised indicator | Round 2 | Outcome | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Systemic antihistamines should not be prescribed to children under 1 year. | 3 (2.5–4) | Revision required | 4 (4–4) | Accepted | |
| 2 | Intranasal beclometasone should not be prescribed to children under 6 years | 4 (4–4) | Accepted | NA | NA | Accepted |
| 3 | Mucolytics should not be prescribed to children under 2 years | 4 (3.5–5) | Revision required | 4 (4–5) | Accepted | |
| 4 | An inhaled SABA should be prescribed to all children who are prescribed two or more inhaled corticosteroids for presumed asthma | 5 (4–5) | Accepted | NA | NA | Accepted |
| 5 | An inhaled SABA should be prescribed to children under 5 years who are also taking a leukotriene receptor antagonist for presumed asthma. | 5 (4–5) | Accepted | NA | NA | Accepted |
| 6 | An inhaled corticosteroid should be prescribed to children aged 5–15 years who are taking a LABA | 5 (4–5) | Accepted | NA | NA | Accepted |
| 7 | LABAs should not be prescribed to children under 5 years. | 4 (3.5–4) | Revision required | LABA's ( | 4 (3.5–4) | Rejected based on lack of consensus of Delphi panel |
| 8 | Children under 12 years who are prescribed a pressurised metered-dose inhaler (pMDI) should also be prescribed a spacer device at least every 12 months. | 4 (4–5) | Accepted | NA | Accepted | |
| 9 | Loperamide should not be used in the treatment of diarrhoea in children under 4 years. | 4 (3.5–5) | Revision required | Loperamide should not be prescribed to children under 4 years. New evidence presented. | 4 (4–5) | Accepted |
| 10 | Domperidone should not be prescribed to children under 1 year, and for children over 1 year, it should not be prescribed for >7 days. | <1 year | Revision required | Rejected based on comments of panel. Lack of evidence to support. | NA | Rejected |
| 11 | Domperidone should not be prescribed concomitantly with erythromycin. | 4 (4–5) | Accepted | NA | NA | Accepted |
| 12 | Codeine/dihydrocodeine medications should not be prescribed to children under 12 years. | 4 (4–5) | Accepted | NA | NA | Accepted |
| 13 | Systemic corticosteroids should not be prescribed to children aged 5–15 years without evidence of asthma. | 3 (2.5–4) | Revision required | 4 (2–4) | Rejected- lack of consensus of Delphi panel. | |
| 14 | An emollient should be prescribed to children who are prescribed more than one topical corticosteroid in a year. | 4 (4–5) | Accepted | NA | NA | Accepted |
| 15 | Very potent or potent topical corticosteroids, for example, clobetasol propionate should not be prescribed to children under 1 year. | 4 (3–4) | Revision required | Rejected by project steering group on the basis that clinical information is required | NA | Rejected |
| 16 | Tetracyclines should not be prescribed to children under 12 years. | 5 (4–5) | Accepted | NA | NA | Accepted |
Following a two-round Delphi process, the final list of indicators consisted of 12 indicators by system: respiratory n=6, gastrointestinal n=2, dermatological n=2, neurological n=2. Table 3 summarises the accepted indicators. Online supplementary file 4 details the PIPc indicators with supporting references.
LABA, long-acting β-2 agonist; NA, not applicable; PIPc, potentially inappropriate prescribing in children; pMDI, pressurised metered-dose inhaler; SABA, short-acting β-2 agonist.
Exemplar comments received from the Delphi panel on rejected indicators
| Rejected following round 1 | Comments |
|---|---|
| ‘ | |
|
| |
| ‘ | |
GORD, Gastro-oesophageal reflux disease; LABA, long-acting β agonists; SMART, Salmeterol Multicenter Asthma Research.
Accepted indicators
| 1 | Intranasal beclometasone should not be prescribed to children under 6 years. |
| 2 | Carbocisteine should not be prescribed to children |
| 3 | An inhaled short-acting β-2 agonist should be prescribed to all children who are prescribed two or more inhaled corticosteroids for presumed asthma |
| 4 | An inhaled short-acting β-2 agonist should be prescribed to children under 5 years who are also taking a leukotriene receptor antagonist for presumed asthma. |
| 5 | An inhaled corticosteroid should be prescribed to children aged 5–15 years, who are taking a long acting β-2 agonist (LABA) |
| 6 | Children under 12 years who are prescribed a pressurised metered-dose inhaler (pMDI) should also be prescribed a spacer device at least every 12 months |
| 7 | Loperamide should not be prescribed to children under 4 years. |
| 8 | Domperidone should not be prescribed concomitantly with erythromycin. |
| 9 | An emollient should be prescribed to children who are prescribed greater than one topical corticosteroid in a year. |
| 10 | Tetracyclines should not be prescribed to children under 12 years. |
| 11 | Codeine/dihydrocodeine medications should not be prescribed to children under 12 years. |
| 12 | Sedating antihistamines should not be prescribed to children under 2 years. |
LABA, long-acting β-2 agonist; pMDI, pressurised metered-dose inhaler.