Gonzales R, Steiner J F, Sande M A
Division of General Internal Medicine, University of Colorado Health Sciences Center, Denver 80262, USA.
JAMA. 1997 Sep 17;278(11):901-4.
Antibiotic use is associated with increased rates of antibiotic-resistant organisms. A previous study has shown that colds, upper respiratory tract infections, and bronchitis account for nearly one third of all antibiotic prescribing by ambulatory care physicians. How frequently antibiotics are prescribed for these conditions and for and by whom is not known.
To measure antibiotic prescription rates and to identify predictors of antibiotic use for adults diagnosed as having colds, upper respiratory tract infections, and bronchitis in the United States.
Sample survey of practicing physicians participating in the National Ambulatory Medical Care Survey, 1992.
Office-based physician practices.
Physicians (n=1529) completing patient record forms for adult office visits (n=28787).
Antibiotic prescriptions for colds, upper respiratory tract infections, and bronchitis.
Office visits for colds, upper respiratory tract infections, and bronchitis resulted in approximately 12 million antibiotic prescriptions, accounting for 21% of all antibiotic prescriptions to adults in 1992. A total of 51 % of patients diagnosed as having colds, 52% of patients diagnosed as having upper respiratory tract infections, and 66% of patients diagnosed as having bronchitis were treated with antibiotics. Female sex (odds ratio [OR], 1.65; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.05-2.62) and rural practice location (OR, 2.25; 95% CI, 1.33-3.80) were associated with greater antibiotic prescription rates, whereas black race (OR, 0.44; 95% CI, 0.21-0.93) was associated with lower antibiotic prescription rates. Patient age, Hispanic ethnicity, geographic region, physician specialty, and payment sources were not associated with antibiotic prescription rates in the bivariate analysis. Multivariate logistic regression analysis identified only rural practice location (adjusted OR, 2.58; 95% CI, 1.39-4.76) to be independently associated with more frequent antibiotic prescriptions for colds, upper respiratory tract infections, and bronchitis.
Although antibiotics have little or no benefit for colds, upper respiratory tract infections, or bronchitis, these conditions account for a sizable proportion of total antibiotic prescriptions for adults by office-based physicians in the United States. Overuse of antibiotics is widespread across geographical areas, medical specialties, and payment sources. Therefore, effective strategies for changing prescribing behavior for these conditions will need to be broad based.
抗生素的使用与抗生素耐药菌的发生率增加有关。先前的一项研究表明,感冒、上呼吸道感染和支气管炎占门诊医生开具的所有抗生素处方的近三分之一。针对这些病症开具抗生素的频率以及开具者和被开具者的情况尚不清楚。
测量美国被诊断患有感冒、上呼吸道感染和支气管炎的成年人的抗生素处方率,并确定抗生素使用的预测因素。
1992年对参与全国门诊医疗调查的执业医生进行抽样调查。
以办公室为基础的医生诊疗机构。
填写成人门诊患者记录表格的医生(n = 1529)及成人门诊就诊患者(n = 28787)。
感冒、上呼吸道感染和支气管炎的抗生素处方。
感冒、上呼吸道感染和支气管炎的门诊就诊导致了约1200万份抗生素处方,占1992年所有成人抗生素处方的21%。总共51%被诊断为感冒的患者、52%被诊断为上呼吸道感染的患者以及66%被诊断为支气管炎的患者接受了抗生素治疗。女性(优势比[OR],1.65;95%置信区间[CI],1.05 - 2.62)和乡村执业地点(OR,2.25;95%CI,1.33 - 3.80)与更高的抗生素处方率相关,而黑人种族(OR,0.44;95%CI,0.21 - 0.93)与较低的抗生素处方率相关。在双变量分析中,患者年龄、西班牙裔种族、地理区域、医生专业和支付来源与抗生素处方率无关。多因素逻辑回归分析仅确定乡村执业地点(调整后OR,2.58;95%CI,1.39 - 4.76)与感冒、上呼吸道感染和支气管炎更频繁的抗生素处方独立相关。
尽管抗生素对感冒、上呼吸道感染或支气管炎几乎没有益处,但在美国,这些病症占以办公室为基础的医生为成人开具的抗生素处方总数的相当大比例。抗生素的过度使用在不同地理区域、医学专业和支付来源中普遍存在。因此,改变针对这些病症的处方行为的有效策略需要具有广泛的基础。