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Point-of-care testing, antibiotic prescribing, and prescribing confidence for respiratory tract infections in primary care: a prospective audit in 18 European countries

Authors :
Alike W van der Velden
Alma C van de Pol
Emily Bongard
Daniela Cianci
Rune Aabenhus
Anca Balan
Femke Böhmer
Valerija Bralić Lang
Pascale Bruno
Slawomir Chlabicz
Samuel Coenen
Annelies Colliers
Ana García-Sangenís
Hrachuhi Ghazaryan
Maciej Godycki-Ćwirko
Siri Jensen
Christos Lionis
Sanne R van der Linde
Lile Malania
Jozsef Pauer
Angela Tomacinschii
Akke Vellinga
Ihor Zastavnyy
Susanne Emmerich
Adam Zerda
Theo J Verheij
Herman Goossens
Christopher C Butler
Source :
BJGP Open, Vol 6, Iss 2 (2022)
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Royal College of General Practitioners, 2022.

Abstract

Background: Between-country differences have been described in antibiotic prescribing for respiratory tract infection (RTI) in primary care, but not yet for diagnostic testing procedures and prescribing confidence. Aim: To describe between-country differences in RTI management, particularly diagnostic testing and antibiotic prescribing, and investigate which factors relate to antibiotic prescribing and GPs’ prescribing confidence. Design & setting: Prospective audit in 18 European countries. Method: An audit of GP-registered patient, clinical, and management characteristics for patients presenting with sore throat and/or lower RTI (n = 4982), and GPs' confidence in their antibiotic prescribing decision. Factors related to antibiotic prescribing and confidence were analysed using multi-level logistic regression. Results: Antibiotic prescribing proportions varied considerably: 40% in six countries. There was also considerable variation in point-of-care (POC) testing (0% in Croatia, Moldova, and Romania, and >65% in Denmark and Norway, mainly for C-reactive protein [CRP] and group A streptococcal [strep A] infection), and in laboratory or hospital-based testing (30% in Croatia, Georgia, Greece, and Moldova, mainly chest X-ray and white blood cell counting). Antibiotic prescribing was related to illness severity, comorbidity, age, fever, and country, but not to having performed a POC test. In nearly 90% of consultations, GPs were confident in their antibiotic prescribing decision. Conclusion: Despite high confidence in decisions about antibiotic prescribing, there is considerable variation in the primary care of RTI in European countries, with GPs prescribing antibiotics overall more often than is considered appropriate. POC testing may enhance the quality of antibiotic prescribing decisions if it can safely reverse decisions confidently made on clinical grounds alone to prescribe antibiotics.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
23983795
Volume :
6
Issue :
2
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
BJGP Open
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.b0f21e9836ad454a9aaa6b8be925c374
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3399/BJGPO.2021.0212