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Inappropriate prescribing of antibiotics to patients with acute bronchitis
Author(s) -
Marijana Petrović,
Roland Antonić,
Bojan Bagi,
Irena Ilić,
Aleksandar Kočović,
Miloš Milosavljević,
Nikola Nedović,
Ana V. Pejčić,
Minela Vapljanin,
Admir Sabanovic,
Slobodan Јаnkovic
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
vojnosanitetski pregled
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.123
H-Index - 19
eISSN - 2406-0720
pISSN - 0042-8450
DOI - 10.2298/vsp170731153p
Subject(s) - medicine , bronchitis , antibiotics , medical prescription , intensive care medicine , primary care , chronic bronchitis , emergency medicine , pediatrics , family medicine , microbiology and biotechnology , pharmacology , biology
/Aim: Inappropriate prescribing of antibiotics to patients with acute bronchitis is frequent event in clinical practice with potentially serious consequences, although majority of treatment guidelines do not recommend it.The aim of this study was to reveal risk factors associated with inappropriate prescribing of antibiotics to the patients with acute bronchitis in primary healthcare. Methods:This case/control study included adult patients with acute bronchitis during the initial encounter with a general practitioner. Prescription of an antibiotic was event that defined a case, and patients without prescribed antibiotic served as controls. Results: Antibiotics (mostly macrolides and beta-lactams) were prescribed to majority of patients with diagnosis of acute bronchitis (78,5%). Significant association was found between antibiotic prescription rates and patient age, whether attending physician is specialist or not and average number of the patients a physician is seeing per day (ORadjustedwas 1.029 [1.007-1.052],0.347 [0.147-0.818] and 0.957 [0.923-0.992], respectively). Conclusion:When there is primary care encounter with a patient suffering from acute bronchitis, older patients are more likely to receive inappropriate antibiotic prescription, especially if their physician is without specialist training and has less patient encounters in his/her office daily.

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