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      Antibiotic prescribing practice and adherence to guidelines in primary care in the Cape Town Metro District, South Africa

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      SAMJ: South African Medical Journal
      Health and Medical Publishing Group

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          Abstract

          BACKGROUND. Knowledge of antibiotic prescribing practice in primary care in South Africa is limited. As 80% of human antibiotic use is in primary care, this knowledge is important in view of the global problem of antibiotic resistance. OBJECTIVES. To assess antibiotic prescribing in primary care facilities in the Cape Town Metro District and compare it with current national guidelines, and to assess the reasons why prescriptions were not adherent to guidelines. METHODS. A retrospective medical record review was performed in April/May 2016. Records of all patients seen over 2 days in each of eight representative primary care facilities in the Cape Town Metro District were reviewed. The treatment of any patient who raised a new complaint on either of those days was recorded. Prophylactic antibiotic courses, tuberculosis treatment and patients with a non-infection diagnosis were excluded. Treatment was compared with the Standard Treatment Guidelines and Essential Medicines List for South Africa, Primary Healthcare Level, 2014 edition. RESULTS. Of 654 records included, 68.7% indicated that an antibiotic had been prescribed. Overall guideline adherence was 45.1%. Adherence differed significantly between facilities and according to the physiological system being treated, whether the prescription was for an adult or paediatric patient, and the antibiotic prescribed. Healthcare professional type and patient gender had no significant effect on adherence. The main reasons for non-adherence were an undocumented diagnosis (30.5%), antibiotic not required (21.6%), incorrect dose (12.9%), incorrect drug (11.5%), and incorrect duration of therapy (9.5%). CONCLUSIONS. This study demonstrates poor adherence to guidelines. Irrational use of antibiotics is associated with increased antibiotic resistance. There is an urgent need to improve antibiotic prescribing practice in primary care in the Cape Town Metro District.

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          Prescribing patterns for upper respiratory tract infections: a prescription-review of primary care practice in Kedah, Malaysia, and the implications.

          It is necessary to ascertain current prescribing of antibiotics for upper respiratory tract infections (URTIs) to address potential overuse. A retrospective analysis was conducted of all prescriptions for URTIs among 10 public primary healthcare centers in Kedah, Malaysia, from 1 January to 31 March 2014.
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            Antibiotic prescribing for children in primary care and adherence to treatment guidelines.

            Antibiotic use is unnecessarily high for paediatric respiratory tract infections (RTIs) in primary care, and implementation of treatment guidelines is difficult in practice. This study aims to assess guideline adherence to antibiotic prescribing for RTIs in children and examine potential variations across Dutch general practices.
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              Antibiotic prescribing for respiratory infections: a cross-sectional analysis of the ReCEnT study exploring the habits of early-career doctors in primary care.

              Antibiotic resistance is among the most important current public health issues. Most antibiotics are prescribed in primary care. There is strong consensus that they are overprescribed, especially for conditions such as upper respiratory tract infections (URTI) and acute bronchitis, where they provide limited benefit. Interventions to alter prescribing patterns have shown limited effect. Trainees in family practice may be an appropriate target, as their prescribing habits are still developing.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Role: ND
                Role: ND
                Role: ND
                Journal
                samj
                SAMJ: South African Medical Journal
                SAMJ, S. Afr. med. j.
                Health and Medical Publishing Group (Cape Town, Western Cape Province, South Africa )
                0256-9574
                2078-5135
                April 2018
                : 108
                : 4
                : 304-310
                Affiliations
                [02] orgnameWessex Leadership Academy UK
                [03] orgnameUK Aid in association with Health Education England UK
                [05] Cape Town orgnameGroote Schuur Hospital South Africa
                [04] orgnameUniversity of Cape Town orgdiv1Faculty of Health Sciences orgdiv2Division of Clinical Pharmacology
                [06] Cape Town orgnameStellenbosch University orgdiv1Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences orgdiv2Division of Health Systems and Public Health South Africa
                [01] orgnameWestern Cape Department of Health South Africa
                Article
                S0256-95742018000400018
                10.7196/samj.2018.v108i4.12564
                29629681
                3fb919fc-9531-41c1-b6ae-241eccbeeb10

                This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License.

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                Figures: 0, Tables: 0, Equations: 0, References: 21, Pages: 7
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                SciELO South Africa


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