Evidence Based Medicine DataLab, Nuffield Department of Primary Care Health Sciences, University of Oxford, Radcliffe Observatory Quarter, Woodstock Road, Oxford, UK.
Centre for Evidence Based Medicine, Nuffield Department of Primary Care Health Sciences, University of Oxford, Radcliffe Observatory Quarter, Woodstock Road, Oxford, UK.
J Antimicrob Chemother. 2019 Jan 1;74(1):242-250. doi: 10.1093/jac/dky377.
Reducing antibiotic overuse is a key NHS priority. The majority of antibiotics are prescribed in primary care.
To describe antibiotic prescribing trends in NHS England primary care for the years 1998-2017 using various measures. We investigated trends and variation between practices and geographical areas, out-of-hours prescribing, and seasonality.
We used publicly available prescribing datasets and calculated antibiotic prescribing rates per 1000 age-sex-adjusted population units, percentage prescribed as broad-spectrum, and course length. We report national time trends for 1998-2016, geographical variation across 2017 and variation trends for 2010-17. We calculated percentiles and ranges, and plotted maps.
The overall rate of antibiotic prescribing has reduced by 18% since 2010, with the steepest decline since 2013. The percentage prescribed as broad-spectrum declined since 2006, from 18.0 to 8.4. Between the best and worst Clinical Commissioning Groups (CCGs) there was 2-fold variation for total antibiotic prescribing, but 7-fold variation for cephalosporins. Variation across general practices has declined. The CCG to which a practice belongs accounted for 12.6% of current variation (P < 0.0001). Higher antibiotic prescribing was associated with greater practice size, proportion of patients >65 years or <18 years, ruralness and deprivation. Seasonal increases have been declining for most antibiotics. If every practice prescribed antibiotics at the lowest decile rate in 2017, 10.8 million fewer prescriptions could have been issued (34%). Compared with standard practices, out-of-hours practices prescribed a greater proportion of broad-spectrum antibiotics.
Despite a general trend towards more optimal antibiotic prescribing, considerable geographical variation persists across England's practices and CCGs.
减少抗生素的过度使用是国民保健制度的一个关键优先事项。大多数抗生素都是在初级保健中开的。
使用各种措施描述 1998 年至 2017 年英格兰国民保健制度初级保健中抗生素的开方趋势。我们调查了实践和地理区域之间、非工作时间开方和季节性之间的趋势和差异。
我们使用了公开的处方数据集,并计算了每 1000 个年龄性别调整的人口单位的抗生素开方率、广谱处方的百分比和疗程长度。我们报告了 1998 年至 2016 年的全国时间趋势、2017 年的地理差异和 2010 年至 17 年的变化趋势。我们计算了百分位数和范围,并绘制了地图。
自 2010 年以来,抗生素的总体开方率下降了 18%,自 2013 年以来下降速度最快。自 2006 年以来,广谱处方的比例从 18.0%下降到 8.4%。在最好和最差的临床委托组(CCG)之间,总抗生素开方存在 2 倍的差异,但头孢菌素的差异则高达 7 倍。整个实践的差异有所下降。实践所属的 CCG 占当前差异的 12.6%(P < 0.0001)。更高的抗生素开方与更大的实践规模、>65 岁或<18 岁的患者比例、农村和贫困有关。大多数抗生素的季节性增加都在下降。如果 2017 年每个实践都按照最低十分位数的速度开抗生素,那么可以减少 1080 万张处方(34%)。与标准实践相比,非工作时间的实践开了更多比例的广谱抗生素。
尽管总体上抗生素的使用趋势更加优化,但英格兰各地的实践和 CCG 之间仍然存在着相当大的地理差异。