Children's Hospital Informatics Program at Harvard-MIT Health Sciences and Technology, Division of Emergency Medicine, Children's Hospital Boston, Boston, Massachusetts, USA.
PLoS One. 2012;7(7):e40991. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0040991. Epub 2012 Jul 19.
This study aimed to comprehensively describe prevalence and temporal dispensing patterns for medications prescribed to children and adolescents in the United States. Participants were 1.6 million children (49% female) under 18 years old enrolled in a nation-wide, employer-provided insurance plan. All medication claims from 1999-2006 were reviewed retrospectively. Drugs were assigned to 16 broad therapeutic categories. Effects of trend over time, seasonality, age and gender on overall and within category prevalence were examined.
Mean monthly prevalence for dispensed medications was 23.5% (range 19.4-27.5), with highest rates in winter and lowest in July. The age group with the highest prevalence was one-year-old children. On average each month, 17.1% of all children were dispensed a single drug and 6.4% were dispensed two or more. Over time, prevalence for two or more drugs did not change, but the proportion of children dispensed a single drug decreased (slope -.02%, p= .001). Overall, boys had higher monthly rates than girls (average difference 0.9%, p= .002). However, differences by gender were greatest during middle childhood, especially for respiratory and central nervous system agents. Contraceptives accounted for a large proportion of dispensed medication to older teenage girls. Rates for the drugs with the highest prevalence in this study were moderately correlated (average Pearson r.66) with those from a previously published national survey.
On average, nearly one quarter of a population of insured children in the United States was dispensed medication each month. This rate decreased somewhat over time, primarily because proportionally fewer children were dispensed a single medication. The rate for two or more drugs dispensed simultaneously remained steady.
本研究旨在全面描述美国儿童和青少年开处方药物的流行率和时间配药模式。参与者为 160 万 18 岁以下参加全国性雇主提供保险计划的儿童。回顾性审查了 1999 年至 2006 年的所有药物索赔。将药物分配到 16 个广泛的治疗类别。考察了趋势随时间、季节性、年龄和性别对整体和分类内流行率的影响。
每月配药药物的平均流行率为 23.5%(范围 19.4-27.5),冬季最高,7 月最低。流行率最高的年龄组是一岁的儿童。平均每月,17.1%的儿童服用一种药物,6.4%的儿童服用两种或更多药物。随着时间的推移,两种或更多药物的流行率没有变化,但服用一种药物的儿童比例下降(斜率-0.02%,p=0.001)。总体而言,男孩每月的比率高于女孩(平均差异 0.9%,p=0.002)。然而,性别差异在儿童中期最大,尤其是呼吸系统和中枢神经系统药物。避孕药占少女配药药物的很大比例。本研究中流行率最高的药物与之前发表的全国调查的药物具有中等相关性(平均 Pearson r.66)。
平均而言,美国有保险的儿童中有近四分之一的儿童每月配药。随着时间的推移,这一比例略有下降,主要是因为服用单一药物的儿童比例下降。同时开两种或更多种药物的比例保持稳定。