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Antibiotic prescribing for upper respiratory infections: European primary paediatricians' knowledge, attitudes and practice.

Abstract

AIM
Young children are the highest receivers of antibiotics in the European Union, with the majority of antibiotics given for children with minor upper respiratory infections (URIs). The study aims to examine paediatricians' reported views influencing community antibiotic prescribing.
METHODS
European primary care paediatricians and participants of the European Academy of Paediatrics Research in Ambulatory Setting Network were asked to complete a Web-based survey on knowledge, attitudes and practice of antibiotic prescribing for URIs.
RESULTS
The survey was completed by 685 respondents from 21 countries, 397 network participants (response rate 65%) and 288 paediatricians. Overall, 43.5% of respondents overestimated the risks associated with not prescribing antibiotics and the clinical benefit of antibiotics in otitis media and tonsillitis (strong believers in the benefits of antibiotics phenotype). Strong believers are also more likely to be high prescribers of antibiotics. Paediatricians from a low or medium European Surveillance of Antimicrobial Consumption country category prescribe less antibiotics than those from a higher category.
CONCLUSION
There is a clear need for an educational intervention focused on European primary care paediatricians based on the risk-benefit analysis associated with the antibiotic prescribing for minor URIs, to reduce inappropriate prescribing.

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  • Publisher Full Text
  • Authors

    Grossman Z, del Torso S, Hadjipanayis A, van Esso D, Drabik A, Sharland M

    Institution

    Maccabi Health Services, Tel Aviv, Israel. zgrosman@netvision.net.il

    Source

    Acta paediatrica (Oslo, Norway : 1992) 101:9 2012 Sep pg 935-40

    MeSH

    Adult
    Anti-Bacterial Agents
    Child
    Europe
    Female
    Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice
    Humans
    Inappropriate Prescribing
    Male
    Middle Aged
    Pediatrics
    Physician's Practice Patterns
    Primary Health Care
    Respiratory Tract Infections
    Risk Assessment

    Pub Type(s)

    Journal Article

    Language

    eng

    PubMed ID

    22716070