Wye Lesley, Hay Alastair D, Northstone Kate, Bishop Jackie, Headley Judith, Thompson Elizabeth
Academic Unit of Primary Health Care, Community Based Medicine, University of Bristol, Cotham House, Cotham Hill, Bristol, UK.
BMC Fam Pract. 2008 Jan 30;9:8. doi: 10.1186/1471-2296-9-8.
Any intervention to reduce the inappropriate use of antibiotics for infections in children has the potential to reduce the selective pressure on antimicrobial resistance and minimise the medicalisation of self-limiting illness. Little is known about whether homeopathic products might be used by some families as an alternative to antibiotics or the characteristics of such families. We used the Avon Longitudinal Study of Parents and Children (ALSPAC) observational dataset to explore the hypothesis that the use of homeopathic products is associated with reduced antibiotic use in pre-school children and to identify characteristics of the families of pre-school children given homeopathic products.
Questionnaires data were completed by the parents of 9723 children while aged between 3-4.5 years in Bristol UK. Univariable and multivariable analyses were used to explore the relationships between antibiotic and homeopathic product use.
Six percent of children had received one or more homeopathic products and 62% one or more antibiotics between the ages of 3 and 4.5 years. After adjustment for factors associated with antibiotic use, there was no association between homeopathic product and antibiotic use (adjusted OR = 1.02, 95% CI 0.84, 1.24). Factors independently associated with child homeopathic product use were: higher maternal education, maternal use of homeopathic products, maternal lack of confidence in doctors, mothers reporting that they were less likely to see doctor when the child was ill, children being given vitamins, watching less television and suffering from wheeze and food allergies.
In this observational study, the use of homeopathic products was not associated with decreased antibiotic consumption, suggesting the use of homeopathic product complements rather than competes with the use of antibiotics in pre-school children. The characteristics of mothers giving homeopathic products to their children are similar to those associated with adult self-administration.
任何旨在减少儿童感染时抗生素不当使用的干预措施,都有可能减轻对抗菌药物耐药性的选择压力,并尽量减少自限性疾病的医学化处理。对于一些家庭是否可能将顺势疗法产品用作抗生素的替代品,以及这类家庭的特征,我们知之甚少。我们利用阿冯父母与儿童纵向研究(ALSPAC)的观察数据集,来探讨顺势疗法产品的使用与学龄前儿童抗生素使用减少之间存在关联这一假设,并确定给学龄前儿童使用顺势疗法产品的家庭的特征。
英国布里斯托尔9723名3至4.5岁儿童的父母完成了问卷调查。采用单变量和多变量分析来探讨抗生素使用与顺势疗法产品使用之间的关系。
在3至4.5岁之间,6%的儿童接受过一种或多种顺势疗法产品,62%的儿童接受过一种或多种抗生素。在对与抗生素使用相关的因素进行调整后,顺势疗法产品使用与抗生素使用之间没有关联(调整后的比值比=1.02,95%置信区间0.84,1.24)。与儿童使用顺势疗法产品独立相关的因素有:母亲教育程度较高、母亲使用顺势疗法产品、母亲对医生缺乏信心、母亲报告孩子生病时她们看医生的可能性较小、孩子服用维生素、看电视较少以及患有喘息和食物过敏。
在这项观察性研究中,顺势疗法产品的使用与抗生素消费减少无关,这表明顺势疗法产品的使用是对学龄前儿童抗生素使用的补充而非竞争。给孩子使用顺势疗法产品的母亲的特征与成人自我用药相关的特征相似。