Linder Jeffrey A, Bates David W, Platt Richard
Division of General Medicine, Brigham and Women's Hospital and Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA 02120, USA.
Pharmacoepidemiol Drug Saf. 2005 Aug;14(8):531-6. doi: 10.1002/pds.1067.
To measure the rates of antiviral and antibiotic prescribing for patients diagnosed with influenza in the United States.
We performed a retrospective analysis of visits to ambulatory clinics and emergency departments in the National Ambulatory Medical Care Survey (NAMCS) and the National Hospital Ambulatory Medical Care Survey (NHAMCS) with a diagnosis of influenza that occurred in seven influenza seasons between 1 October 1995 and 31 May 2002 (n=1216).
There were an estimated 22 million visits (95%CI, 17--26 million visits) with a diagnosis of influenza to community ambulatory clinics (88% of visits), hospital ambulatory clinics (3%) and emergency departments (9%) in the United States between the 1995--1996 and the 2001--2002 influenza seasons, inclusive. The sample was 63% adults, 44% male and 84% white. Physicians prescribed antivirals in 19% of visits and antibiotics not associated with an antibiotic-appropriate diagnosis in 26% of visits. In multivariable modeling, independent predictors of antiviral prescribing were adult age (OR, 2.1; 95%CI, 1.1--4.0) and Medicare insurance (OR, 0.1 compared to private insurance; 95%CI, 0.0--0.6). Antiviral prescribing was marginally associated with influenza season (OR, 1.2 per influenza season; 95%CI, 1.0--1.4). Independent predictors of antibiotic prescribing were influenza season (OR, 0.8 per influenza season; 95%CI, 0.7--0.9), male sex (OR, 0.6; 95%CI, 0.4--0.9), adult age (OR, 2.3; 95%CI, 1.2--4.2) and emergency department visits (OR, 0.5 compared to community ambulatory visits; 95%CI, 0.3--0.8).
Physicians prescribed antiviral medications to 19% of patients they diagnosed with influenza; the proportion that would have been clinically appropriate is unknown. In contrast, physicians prescribed apparently inappropriate antibiotics to 26% of these same patients, a rate that, encouragingly, decreased over time.
测量美国诊断为流感的患者的抗病毒药物和抗生素处方率。
我们对1995年10月1日至2002年5月31日期间七个流感季节在国家门诊医疗护理调查(NAMCS)和国家医院门诊医疗护理调查(NHAMCS)中诊断为流感的门诊和急诊科就诊情况进行了回顾性分析(n = 1216)。
在1995 - 1996年至2001 - 2002年流感季节(含)期间,美国社区门诊(占就诊的88%)、医院门诊(占3%)和急诊科(占9%)估计有2200万次就诊诊断为流感。样本中63%为成年人,44%为男性,84%为白人。医生在19%的就诊中开具了抗病毒药物,在26%的就诊中开具了与抗生素适用诊断无关的抗生素。在多变量模型中,抗病毒药物处方的独立预测因素是成年年龄(比值比[OR],2.1;95%置信区间[CI],1.1 - 4.0)和医疗保险(与私人保险相比,OR为0.1;95%CI,0.0 - 0.6)。抗病毒药物处方与流感季节有微弱关联(每个流感季节OR为1.2;95%CI,1.0 - 1.4)。抗生素处方的独立预测因素是流感季节(每个流感季节OR为0.8;95%CI,0.7 - 0.9)、男性(OR,0.6;95%CI,0.4 - 0.9)、成年年龄(OR,2.3;95%CI,1.2 - 4.2)和急诊科就诊(与社区门诊就诊相比,OR为0.5;95%CI,0.3 - 0.8)。
医生对他们诊断为流感的患者中的19%开具了抗病毒药物;临床上合适的比例尚不清楚。相比之下,医生对这些相同患者中的26%开具了明显不适当的抗生素,令人鼓舞的是,这一比例随着时间的推移有所下降。