Patel Akshani, Kumar Satish
Arizona School of Dentistry & Oral Health, A.T. Still University, Mesa, AZ, USA.
Evid Based Dent. 2024 Dec;25(4):208-210. doi: 10.1038/s41432-024-01087-3. Epub 2024 Nov 20.
Patient records from Wits Oral Health Centre were collected over two years (March 2019-March 2021). The records were divided into two groups: pre-COVID-19 (March 2019-March 2020) and COVID-19 (March 2020-March 2021). The total sample size was 698 systematically selected patient records who received antibiotics.
A systematic random sampling method was used to select a sample of patients who received prescriptions for antibiotics. Patients were included based on their treatment time and need for antibiotic prescription. Patients whose records were missing information or treated by independent private practitioners for whom records access was not feasible were excluded.
The extracted data contained information regarding the patients' demographics, medical histories, dental condition, dental procedure, antibiotic type, frequency, dosage, duration of use, and prescribers' disciplines. The information was categorized and captured in Microsoft Excel to analyze and create figures and tables. Analysis was performed using descriptive statistics, chi-squared, and z-tests to compare pre-COVID-19 and COVID-19 prescription patterns in RStudio.
From an initial pool of 44,067 patient consultations, a systematic random sample of 698 records met the eligibility criteria for inclusion in this study. The sample was divided between pre-COVID-19 (n = 350) and COVID-19 (n = 348). A significant increase in antibiotic prescriptions was found during COVID-19 (1571 prescriptions) compared to pre-COVID-19 (1109 prescriptions). The most commonly prescribed antibiotics were amoxicillin and metronidazole. Specifically, amoxicillin was used in most cases before and during COVID-19. The combination of amoxicillin with metronidazole increased from 16.6% pre-COVID-19 to 24.4% COVID-19. It was found that many of the antibiotics prescribed from both periods were not clinically indicated (53.1% pre-COVID-19 and 54.3% COVID-19).
The authors concluded that the COVID-19 pandemic significantly increased antibiotic prescriptions despite fewer in-person consultations. This was likely due to insufficient surgical intervention and reliance on antibiotics to treat dental conditions. The lack of proper antibiotic use raises concerns regarding dental practitioners' appropriate use of antibiotics. There is an urgent need for improved antibiotic stewardship to prevent the misuse and growing public health issue of antimicrobial resistance.
收集了威特沃特斯兰德大学口腔健康中心两年(2019年3月至2021年3月)的患者记录。这些记录被分为两组:新冠疫情前(2019年3月至2020年3月)和新冠疫情期间(2020年3月至2021年3月)。总样本量为698份通过系统抽样选取的接受过抗生素治疗的患者记录。
采用系统随机抽样方法选取接受抗生素处方的患者样本。根据患者的治疗时间和抗生素处方需求纳入患者。记录中缺少信息的患者,或由独立私人执业医生治疗且无法获取记录的患者被排除。
提取的数据包含患者的人口统计学信息、病史、牙齿状况、牙科治疗程序、抗生素类型、频率、剂量、使用时长以及开处方者的专业。这些信息被分类并录入Microsoft Excel中,以进行分析并制作图表。在RStudio中使用描述性统计、卡方检验和z检验进行分析,以比较新冠疫情前和新冠疫情期间的处方模式。
在最初的44067例患者会诊记录中,698份系统随机抽取的记录符合本研究的纳入标准。样本分为新冠疫情前组(n = 350)和新冠疫情期间组(n = 348)。与新冠疫情前(1109份处方)相比,新冠疫情期间(1571份处方)抗生素处方显著增加。最常开具的抗生素是阿莫西林和甲硝唑。具体而言,在新冠疫情前和疫情期间的大多数情况下都使用了阿莫西林。阿莫西林与甲硝唑的联合使用从新冠疫情前的16.6%增加到了新冠疫情期间的24.4%。研究发现,两个时期开具的许多抗生素在临床上并无指征(新冠疫情前为53.1%,新冠疫情期间为54.3%)。
作者得出结论,尽管面对面会诊减少,但新冠疫情仍显著增加了抗生素处方。这可能是由于手术干预不足以及依赖抗生素治疗牙齿疾病。抗生素使用不当引发了人们对牙科医生合理使用抗生素的担忧。迫切需要加强抗生素管理,以防止抗生素滥用以及日益严重的抗菌药物耐药性这一公共卫生问题。