Antibiotic prescribing patterns in outpatient emergency clinics at Queen Rania al Abdullah II children's hospital, Jordan, 2013

Joint Authors

Goussous, Lana S.
Ufaishat, Raniya A.
Salah, Rihab K.
al-Jabburi, Tariq M.
al-Nuaymat, Sahar I.

Source

Oman Medical Journal

Issue

Vol. 29, Issue 4 (31 Aug. 2014), pp.250-254, 5 p.

Publisher

Oman Medical Specialty Board

Publication Date

2014-08-31

Country of Publication

Oman

No. of Pages

5

Main Subjects

Medicine

Abstract EN

Objective: To investigate antibiotics prescribing patterns in the outpatient pediatric emergency clinic at Queen Rania Al Abdullah II Children’s Hospital at Royal Medical Services in Amman, Jordan.

Methods: The data was collected from the emergency pharmacy over the period of a -five consecutive months.

The methodology recommended by the World Health Organization for investigating drug use in a health facility was followed.

The study measures the percentage of encounter with a prescribed antibiotic and the percentage share of each antibiotic category.

The distribution of diagnostic categories that accounted for all antibiotics being prescribed and the distribution of each antibiotic being prescribed for upper respiratory tract infections (URTIs) were also measured.

Results: Antibiotic prescribing was frequent during pediatric visits to the outpatient pediatric emergency clinic resulting in a high percentage of encounters (85%) when compared to appropriate.

Emergency physicians continue to frequently prescribe broad spectrum antibiotics which accounted for approximately (60%) of the total prescribed antibiotics and (83%) of prescribed antibiotics for upper respiratory tract infections and macrolides (primarily azithromycin) were the leading class among them.

Conclusion: Our results showed high consumption of antibiotics by emergency department pediatricians which highlight the importance for interventions to promote rational and judicious prescribing.

An insight into factors influencing antibiotics prescribing patterns by military prescribers is required.

American Psychological Association (APA)

al-Nuaymat, Sahar I.& al-Jabburi, Tariq M.& Goussous, Lana S.& Ufaishat, Raniya A.& Salah, Rihab K.. 2014. Antibiotic prescribing patterns in outpatient emergency clinics at Queen Rania al Abdullah II children's hospital, Jordan, 2013. Oman Medical Journal،Vol. 29, no. 4, pp.250-254.
https://search.emarefa.net/detail/BIM-831815

Modern Language Association (MLA)

al-Nuaymat, Sahar I.…[et al.]. Antibiotic prescribing patterns in outpatient emergency clinics at Queen Rania al Abdullah II children's hospital, Jordan, 2013. Oman Medical Journal Vol. 29, no. 4 (2014), pp.250-254.
https://search.emarefa.net/detail/BIM-831815

American Medical Association (AMA)

al-Nuaymat, Sahar I.& al-Jabburi, Tariq M.& Goussous, Lana S.& Ufaishat, Raniya A.& Salah, Rihab K.. Antibiotic prescribing patterns in outpatient emergency clinics at Queen Rania al Abdullah II children's hospital, Jordan, 2013. Oman Medical Journal. 2014. Vol. 29, no. 4, pp.250-254.
https://search.emarefa.net/detail/BIM-831815

Data Type

Journal Articles

Language

English

Notes

Includes bibliographical references : p. 254

Record ID

BIM-831815