Associations between declining antimicrobial use in primary care in Scotland and patient satisfaction and hospitalisation due to infection: a longitudinal study of greater than five million patients

Background. Scottish antimicrobial prescribing in the community has fallen since 2012, but this could have unintended consequences. The aim was to examine associations between changes in antibiotic prescribing in primary care and hospital admissions and patient satisfaction. Methods. Data for 877 Sc...

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Veröffentlicht in:Access microbiology 2020-02, Vol.2 (2)
Hauptverfasser: Guthrie, Isobel, Marwick, Charis
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Background. Scottish antimicrobial prescribing in the community has fallen since 2012, but this could have unintended consequences. The aim was to examine associations between changes in antibiotic prescribing in primary care and hospital admissions and patient satisfaction. Methods. Data for 877 Scottish general practices with 5.1 million patients were provided by NHS National Services Scotland. Practices were classified into four equal groups (quartiles) in terms of change in total antibiotic prescribing (rate/1000 registered patients in each quarter) 2012-2018. Changes in hospital admission with infection were examined comparing the four groups. Multivariate regression examined associations between change in antibiotic prescribing and patient satisfaction with the practice using national survey data. Results. Across Scotland, primary care antibiotic prescribing decreased by 15% from 194.1 (95%CI 193.8-194.4) in Q1 2012 to 165.3 (95%CI 165.0-165.6 ) in Q2 2012, with considerable variation between practices (non-significant increase of 0.22 prescriptions/1000/quarter [p=0.49] for the quartile of practices with least reduction in antibiotic prescribing, vs reduction of -2.95 prescriptions/1000/quarter [p
ISSN:2516-8290
2516-8290
DOI:10.1099/acmi.fis2019.po0150