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      Overview of Antibiotic Use in Korea

      1
      Infection & Chemotherapy
      Korean Society of Infectious Diseases and Korean Society for Chemotherapy (KAMJE)

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          Most cited references48

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          Evidence-Based Guidelines for Empirical Therapy of Neutropenic Fever in Korea

          Neutrophils play an important role in immunological function. Neutropenic patients are vulnerable to infection, and except fever is present, inflammatory reactions are scarce in many cases. Additionally, because infections can worsen rapidly, early evaluation and treatments are especially important in febrile neutropenic patients. In cases in which febrile neutropenia is anticipated due to anticancer chemotherapy, antibiotic prophylaxis can be used, based on the risk of infection. Antifungal prophylaxis may also be considered if long-term neutropenia or mucosal damage is expected. When fever is observed in patients suspected to have neutropenia, an adequate physical examination and blood and sputum cultures should be performed. Initial antibiotics should be chosen by considering the risk of complications following the infection; if the risk is low, oral antibiotics can be used. For initial intravenous antibiotics, monotherapy with a broad-spectrum antibiotic or combination therapy with two antibiotics is recommended. At 3-5 days after beginning the initial antibiotic therapy, the condition of the patient is assessed again to determine whether the fever has subsided or symptoms have worsened. If the patient's condition has improved, intravenous antibiotics can be replaced with oral antibiotics; if the condition has deteriorated, a change of antibiotics or addition of antifungal agents should be considered. If the causative microorganism is identified, initial antimicrobial or antifungal agents should be changed accordingly. When the cause is not detected, the initial agents should continue to be used until the neutrophil count recovers.
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            Antibiotic use following a Korean national policy to prohibit medication dispensing by physicians.

            This study investigated whether a Korean national policy prohibiting doctors from dispensing drugs as of 2000 selectively reduced inappropriate antibiotic prescribing in viral illness compared with bacterial illness. We assessed the proportions of episodes prescribed an antibiotic and the number of different antibiotics prescribed for patients with viral and bacterial illness episodes before and after the policy. The nationally representative sample consisted of 50,999 episodes (18,656 viral and 7758 bacterial pre-policy, 16,736 viral and 7849 bacterial post-policy) from 1372 primary care clinics. We used generalized estimating equations to investigate changes in antibiotic prescribing after the policy, and multiple linear regression to determine provider factors associated with reductions in inappropriate antibiotic prescribing for viral illness. After the dispensing restriction, antibiotic prescribing declined substantially for patients with viral illness (from 80.8 to 72.8%, relative risk (RR) = 0.89, [95% confidence interval: 0.86, 0.91], p<0.001), and only minimally for patients with bacterial illness (from 91.6 to 89.7%, RR = 0.98, [0.97, 0.99], p = 0.017). Reductions in antibiotic prescribing were significantly larger (RR = 0.90, [0.87, 0.93], p<0.001) for patients with viral illness. The number of different antibiotics prescribed per episode also decreased significantly after the policy, but there were no significant differences in these reductions between viral and bacterial illness. The dispensing restriction also reduced prescribing of non-antibiotic drugs, with no difference by diagnosis. Provider factors found to be associated with reduced inappropriate antibiotic prescribing were younger age and practice location in an urban area. Prohibiting doctors from dispensing drugs reduced prescribing overall, both of antibiotics and other drugs, and selectively reduced inappropriate antibiotic prescribing in viral illness.
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              Knowledge and beliefs of primary care physicians, pharmacists, and parents on antibiotic use for the pediatric common cold.

              The aim of this study is to investigate knowledge and beliefs of primary care physicians (e.g. family practitioners and pediatricians), pharmacists, and parents regarding the use of antibiotics for the pediatric common cold, using a self-administered questionnaire for physicians and pharmacists and a telephone interview for parents. This article suggests that parents' expectation for antibiotics is a minor factor, and health care providers' unfounded beliefs in the effectiveness of antibiotics and exaggeration of parents' demand for antibiotics may be the major contributing factor underlying antibiotic over-prescription for the pediatric common cold in Korea. Most physicians and pharmacists knew the correct cause of the pediatric common cold, but majorities of the physicians and pharmacists believed that antibiotics could treat and reduce its complications. On the other hand, 34% of the parents believed that antibiotics could prevent complications. Seventy three per cent of the physicians reported that they perceived expectations for antibiotics from parents, but only 2% of the parents reported asking their physicians for antibiotics. In summary, this study suggests that physicians' knowledge and faulty beliefs can be more important factors for inappropriate antibiotic prescription.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Infection & Chemotherapy
                Infect Chemother
                Korean Society of Infectious Diseases and Korean Society for Chemotherapy (KAMJE)
                2093-2340
                2092-6448
                2012
                2012
                : 44
                : 4
                : 250
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Department of Internal Medicine, Inje University College of Medicine, Busan, Korea.
                Article
                10.3947/ic.2012.44.4.250
                83d540b5-7fc8-46d3-81ce-bbbd76a48dcf
                © 2012

                http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/

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