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JAC Advance Access originally published online on July 15, 2003
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Journal of Antimicrobial Chemotherapy (2003) 52, 282-286
© 2003 The British Society for Antimicrobial Chemotherapy

Antibiotic prescriptions in children

D. Resi*, M. Milandri, M. L. Moro and the Emilia Romagna Study Group on the Use of Antibiotics in Children§

Agenzia Sanitaria Regionale Emilia Romagna, Area Rischio Infettivo, Viale Aldo Moro 21, 40127 Bologna, Italy

Received 20 December 2002; returned 27 February 2003; revised 17 April 2003; accepted 25 April 2003

Objectives: The aim of this study was to evaluate antibiotic prescription for children in Emilia Romagna, a Northern Italian region with 414  880 people aged 1–14 years.

Methods: The regional Prescription Database of drugs reimbursed by the Italian National Health Service was used in this study. Antibiotic use was estimated as the proportion of children who received at least one prescription during the year 2000 (number of children treated per 100 inhabitants per year). To evaluate the frequency of exposure for each child, all the prescriptions given within a period shorter than 12 days were considered as a single treatment.

Results: In the year surveyed, 511 270 antibiotic prescriptions in 219 257 children were identified. In all, 52.9% of children received at least one antibiotic; this percentage decreased with age, ranging from 70.4% in children 1–2 years old to 35.8% in children >11 years old. Fifty-two per cent of inhabitants under the age of 15 years were treated with systemic antibiotics at least once in the year. Cephalosporins were mostly prescribed in the youngest children, while macrolides were most frequently used in children over 6 years old. In all 3.9% of children were treated with topical antibiotics.

Conclusions: This study has shown that paediatric antibiotic prescription rates can be derived from analysis of regional drug and resident databases. High antibiotic usage is shown in the paediatric population of Emilia Romagna, similar to that observed in other regions of Northern Italy. Broad-spectrum antibiotics are predominantly prescribed. Comparison with prescription rates from other countries’ paediatric populations suggests there is extensive antibiotic overuse in Italy. This could be associated with selection for and dissemination of antibiotic resistance. Interventions are needed to reduce consumption.

Keywords: pharmacoepidemiology, paediatrician’s prescriptions, drug utilization

* Corresponding author. Tel: +39-051-6397134; Fax: +39-051-6397053; E-mail: dresi{at}asr.regione.emilia-romagna.it

§ Members of the Emilia Romagna Study Group on the Use of Antibiotics in Children are listed in the Acknowledgements.


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