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Relationship between prescribing of antibiotics and other medicines in primary care:a cross-sectional study
- Source :
- Li, Y, Mölter, A, White, A, Welfare, W, Palin, V, Belmonte, M, Ashcroft, D M, Sperrin, M & van Staa, T P 2018, ' Relationship between prescribing of antibiotics and other medicines in primary care : a cross-sectional study ', The British journal of general practice : the journal of the Royal College of General Practitioners . https://doi.org/10.3399/bjgp18X700457, The British Journal of General Practice
- Publication Year :
- 2018
-
Abstract
- BackgroundHigh levels of antibiotic prescribing are a major concern as they drive antimicrobial resistance. It is currently unknown whether practices that prescribe higher levels of antibiotics also prescribe more medicines in general.AimTo evaluate the relationship between antibiotic and general prescribing levels in primary care.Design and settingCross-sectional study in 2014–2015 of 6517 general practices in England using NHS digital practice prescribing data (NHS-DPPD) for the main study, and of 587 general practices in the UK using the Clinical Practice Research Datalink for a replication study.MethodLinear regression to assess determinants of antibiotic prescribing.ResultsNHS-DPPD practices prescribed an average of 576.1 antibiotics per 1000 patients per year (329.9 at the 5th percentile and 808.7 at the 95th percentile). The levels of prescribing of antibiotics and other medicines were strongly correlated. Practices with high levels of prescribing of other medicines (a rate of 27 159.8 at the 95th percentile) prescribed 80% more antibiotics than low-prescribing practices (rate of 8815.9 at the 5th percentile). After adjustment, NHS-DPPD practices with high prescribing of other medicines gave 60% more antibiotic prescriptions than low-prescribing practices (corresponding to higher prescribing of 276.3 antibiotics per 1000 patients per year). Prescribing of non-opioid painkillers and benzodiazepines were also strong indicators of the level of antibiotic prescribing. General prescribing levels were a much stronger driver for antibiotic prescribing than other risk factors, such as deprivation.ConclusionThe propensity of GPs to prescribe medications generally is an important driver for antibiotic prescribing. Interventions that aim to optimise antibiotic prescribing will need to target general prescribing behaviours, in addition to specifically targeting antibiotics.
- Subjects :
- Percentile
medicine.medical_specialty
Prescription Drugs
medicine.drug_class
Cross-sectional study
Antibiotics
Psychological intervention
Primary care
antibiotics
Antibiotic prescribing
Benzodiazepines
03 medical and health sciences
0302 clinical medicine
Antibiotic resistance
medicine
Humans
030212 general & internal medicine
Practice Patterns, Physicians'
Medical prescription
general practice
Primary Health Care
business.industry
Research
030503 health policy & services
Analgesics, Non-Narcotic
United Kingdom
Anti-Bacterial Agents
Cross-Sectional Studies
drug prescribing
Family medicine
Linear Models
0305 other medical science
Family Practice
business
non-antibiotics
non-opioid painkillers
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Li, Y, Mölter, A, White, A, Welfare, W, Palin, V, Belmonte, M, Ashcroft, D M, Sperrin, M & van Staa, T P 2018, ' Relationship between prescribing of antibiotics and other medicines in primary care : a cross-sectional study ', The British journal of general practice : the journal of the Royal College of General Practitioners . https://doi.org/10.3399/bjgp18X700457, The British Journal of General Practice
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....427c9761b27ed71cd737b5765863f26b