Assessment of Antibiotic Prescribing for Influenza in the US Outpatient Care Setting


Article PDF :

Veiw Full Text PDF

Article type :

Original article

Author :

Ateequr Rahman,Lejla Cukovic,Sara Mehmood,Ayah Younis

Volume :

1

Issue :

5

Abstract :

This retrospective research aimed to study the prescribing trends of antibiotics for influenza and adherence to the guidelines issued by the Infectious Diseases Society of America (IDSA) by utilizing the National Ambulatory Medical Survey (NAMCS) 2016 database. This was based on a sample of visits to non-federally employed officebased physicians who are engaged in direct patient care at community health centers. Patient sex, race, as well as the source of payment, and the provider type were among the demographic variables studied for adherence to the guidelines. The total number of ambulatory care visits were 1,753. Of those, 63.6% of patients were prescribed, inappropriate agents. General and Family Practice physicians were the most frequented providers (32.9%), followed by Nurse Practitioners (21.9%), and Pediatricians (17.1%). Family practice physicians and nurse practitioners appeared to prescribe more inappropriately as compared to the other specialties (X2 =0.001). White and black patients were prescribed more inappropriately as compared to other races (X2 =0.032). Antibiotic resistance is a public health problem of increasing magnitude, and finding effective solutions to address this problem is critical. Antibiotic resistance is also an economic healthcare burden. Adherence to guidelines minimizes antibiotic resistance and promotes patients and public health.

Keyword :

National Ambulatory Medical Care Survey, Prescribing patterns, Antibiotic resistance , Adherence, Healthcare disparity
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