| Literature DB >> 30563558 |
Nebyu Daniel Amaha1, Yohana Haile Berhe2, Atul Kaushik3.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: Inappropriate use of antibiotics in primary care and hospital settings is a major contributing factor to the spread of antibiotic resistance. Many microorganisms were tested in Eritrea and have proven resistant to ampicillin. The aim of this study was to investigate the prescription pattern, hospital indicator and patient care indicator of antibiotics among hospitalized patients in Halibet National Referral Hospital, Asmara, Eritrea.Entities:
Keywords: Antibiotic; Inpatient study; Prescription; Rational drug use; WHO indicators
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30563558 PMCID: PMC6299551 DOI: 10.1186/s13104-018-4000-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Res Notes ISSN: 1756-0500
Comparison of inpatient drug use indicators in HNRH with WHO ideal values
| Core drug use and In-patient antibiotic use indicator | Result (SD) | WHO [ |
|---|---|---|
| Percent of hospitalization with one or more antibiotics prescribed | 79% | 20–26%a |
| Average number of antibiotics prescribed per hospitalizations | 1.29 | 1.6–1.8b |
| Percent of antibiotics from National or Hospital Formulary | 100% | 100% |
| Average number of days antibiotic treatment was prescribed | 6.36 (6.06) | – |
| Percent of antibiotics prescribed by generic name | 97% | 100% |
| Percentage of key antibiotics available on the day of study | 87.5% | 100% |
| Average number of days that a set of key antibiotic was out of stock | 78.18 | – |
| Expenditure on antimicrobials as a percentage of total hospital medicine cost | 25.59% | 20–40 |
| Average number of days of patients who received antibiotics stayed in hospital | 9.97(7.33) | – |
| Percent of antibiotics prescribed in injection form | 81.4% | 13.4–24.1a |
SD standard deviation
aWHO optimal value for outpatient departments
bWHO indicator for all medicines (including antibiotics) prescribed per encounter
Route of administration, number per hospitalization, treatment days, most commonly prescribed antibiotics and hospital stay days in HNRH
| Antibiotic treatment days | 1–7 days | 77.2% |
| 7–14 days | 13.9% | |
| 15–20 days | 2.53% | |
| > 21 days | 3.79% | |
| Number of antibiotics per hospitalization | One antibiotic | 77% |
| Two antibiotics | 17% | |
| Three antibiotics | 6% | |
| Most commonly prescribed antibiotics | Ampicillin | 42.1% |
| Benzyl penicillin | 13.7% | |
| Gentamycin | 9.8% | |
| Cloxacillin | 8.8% | |
| Ceftriaxone | 5.9% | |
| Ciprofloxacin | 4.9% | |
| Days spent in the Hospital | 1–10 days | 67.5% |
| 11–20 days | 26% | |
| > 21 days | 6.5% |
Comparison of antibiotics use with other African countries
| Indicator | Ethiopia [ | Sudan [ | DR Congo [ | Zambia [ | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Percent of hospitalization with one or more antibiotics prescribed | 79% | 73.7% | 81.3% | 68% | 53.7%a |
| Average number of antibiotics prescribed per hospitalizations | 1.29 | 2.1 | 2b | 1.4 | 2.5b |
| Generic name prescribing | 97% | 90.6% | 49.3% | NS | 56.1% |
| Most commonly prescribed antibiotic | Ampicillin | Ceftriaxone | NSc | Ampicillin | Amoxicillina |
| Parenteral route of administering antibiotics | 81% | 82.4% | 3.5%a | 68.2% | 11.8%a |
| Percentage of patients taking two or more antibiotics | 23% | 65% | NS | 34.9% | |
| Availability of key antibiotics | 87.5% | 65.7% | 81.3% | NS | 83.3% |
| Average days of antibiotic stock out per year | 78.18 | 30 | NS | NS | |
| Drugs prescribed from EML | 100% | 96.6% | 57.2% | NS | 98.1% |
aOutpatient department prescriptions
bNumber of all drugs prescribed including antibiotics
cData not stated