| Literature DB >> 29746637 |
Gwenan M Knight1,2, Madeleine Clarkson2, Thushan I de Silva3,4,5.
Abstract
Background: Influenza infections result in both inappropriate and appropriate antibiotic prescribing. There is a huge burden of both influenza and infections caused by antimicrobial-resistant pathogens in Africa. Influenza vaccines have the potential to reduce appropriate antibiotic use, through reduction of secondary bacterial infections, as well as to reduce levels of influenza misdiagnosed and treated as a bacterial infection (inappropriate).Entities:
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29746637 PMCID: PMC6054263 DOI: 10.1093/jac/dky172
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Antimicrob Chemother ISSN: 0305-7453 Impact factor: 5.790
Estimated number of antibiotic prescriptions that could be averted per year by the introduction of an influenza vaccine into specific high-risk groups in Africa, where we could find sufficient data
| Population | Setting | ILI | SARI | Number of prescriptions averted per year, mean (range) | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| total | per 100 000 population | per 10 000 vaccinations | ||||
| ≥65 years old | South Africa | x | 11 153 | 399 | 133 | |
| Ghana | x | x | 140 (125–157) | 15 (13–17) | 5 (4.5–5.6) | |
| <5 years old | Kenya | x | 9425 (6492–13 655) | 135 (93–195) | 44.9 (30.9–65.1) | |
| Ghana | x | x | 8456 (8233–8691) | 210 (205–216) | 70.1 (68.2–72) | |
| 2–5 years old | Senegal | x | 13 772 | 945 | 315.0 | |
| <6 months old | South Africa | x | 1094 | 189 | 63.0 | |
| Mali | x | 505 | 147 | 49.0 | ||
| Kenya | x | x | 894 (254–3434) | 128 (36–491) | 42.6 (12.1–163.7) | |
| Pregnant | South Africa | x | 1661 | 189 | 63.0 | |
| Mali | x | 565 | 100 | 33.3 | ||
| <5 years old | Africaa | x | 24 (12–49) | 13 (7–26) | 4.4 (2.2–8.7) | |
| Africaa | x | 25 (14–47) | 14 (7–25) | 4.5 (2.4–8.3) | ||
A cross (‘x’) indicates where estimates came from: ILI, SARI or both. The range given is a 95% CI except for Kenyan data for which it is minimum–maximum. See Table S1 for sources of incidence data for each example. Vaccine effectiveness was assumed to be 50%, vaccine coverage 30% and antibiotic availability 50%. Estimates for other coverage and antibiotic availability can be found in Supplementary data – Part II.
Note that the values for the estimates for the African setting total are in thousands of prescriptions.