Assessment of antimicrobial use and prescribing practices among pediatric inpatients in Zimbabwe

This study aims to assess antimicrobial consumption in the pediatric department of a tertiary care public hospital in Zimbabwe. Clinical records of pediatric inpatients admitted to Harare Central Hospital over a 3-week period were reviewed prospectively. Antimicrobial consumption was described as da...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of chemotherapy (Florence) 2020-11, Vol.32 (8), p.456-459
Hauptverfasser: Olaru, Ioana D., Meierkord, Anne, Godman, Brian, Ngwenya, Crispen, Fitzgerald, Felicity, Dondo, Vongai, Ferrand, Rashida A., Kranzer, Katharina
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:This study aims to assess antimicrobial consumption in the pediatric department of a tertiary care public hospital in Zimbabwe. Clinical records of pediatric inpatients admitted to Harare Central Hospital over a 3-week period were reviewed prospectively. Antimicrobial consumption was described as days of therapy per 100 inpatient days (DOT/100 PD). Adherence of antimicrobial drug prescriptions to the National Guidelines was also evaluated. A total of 121 (93.1%) children were prescribed at least one antimicrobial out of 130 children admitted. The median age was 14 months (IQR: 3 − 48 months). Overall antimicrobial consumption was 155.4 DOT/100 PD (95% CI 146-165.2). The most frequently prescribed antimicrobials were benzylpenicillin, gentamicin and ceftriaxone. Prescriptions were adherent to national guidelines in 57.7% of children. This study shows that there is high antimicrobial drug usage in hospitalized children in Zimbabwe and a considerable proportion of prescriptions are non-adherent with national guidelines.
ISSN:1120-009X
1973-9478
DOI:10.1080/1120009X.2020.1734719