Back to Search Start Over

Application of a Common Data Model (CDM) to rank the paediatric user and prescription prevalence of 15 different drug classes in South Korea, Hong Kong, Taiwan, Japan and Australia: an observational, descriptive study

Authors :
Martijn J. Schuemie
Ian C. K. Wong
Rae Woong Park
Usman Iqbal
Phung Anh Nguyen
Soo Yeon Cho
Yu-Chuan Jack Li
Kenneth K.C. Man
Ruth Brauer
Nicole L. Pratt
Brauer, Ruth
Wong, Ian Chi Kei
Man, Kenneth KC
Pratt, Nicole L
Park, Rae Woong
Cho, Soo-Yeon
Li, Yu-Chuan (Jack)
Iqbal, Usman
Nguyen, Phung-Anh Alex
Schuemie, Martijn
Source :
BMJ Open
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
UK : BMJ Group, 2020.

Abstract

ObjectiveTo measure the paediatric user and prescription prevalence in inpatient and ambulatory settings in South Korea, Hong Kong, Taiwan, Japan and Australia by age and gender. A further objective was to list the most commonly used drugs per drug class, per country.Design and settingHospital inpatient and insurance paediatric healthcare data from the following databases were used to conduct this descriptive drug utilisation study: (i) the South Korean Ajou University School of Medicine database; (ii) the Hong Kong Clinical Data Analysis and Reporting System; (iii) the Japan Medical Data Center; (iv) Taiwan’s National Health Insurance Research Database and (v) the Australian Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme. Country-specific data were transformed into the Observational Medical Outcomes Partnership Common Data Model.PatientsChildren (≤18 years) with at least 1 day of observation in any of the respective databases from January 2009 until December 2013 were included.Main outcome measuresFor each drug class, we assessed the per-protocol overall user and prescription prevalence rates (per 1000 persons) per country and setting.ResultsOur study population comprised 1 574 524 children (52.9% male). The highest proportion of dispensings was recorded in the youngest age category (ConclusionsCountry-specific paediatric drug utilisation patterns were described, ranked and compared between four East Asian countries and Australia. The widespread use of mucolytics in East Asia warrants further investigation.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
BMJ Open
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....baf6ba85113e58cc42e62c90b7768a86