Antibiotic Prescription Trends Among the Paediatric Population Admitted in Tertiary Care Hospitals of Rawalpindi

Authors

  • Sana Iqbal Department of Community Medicine, Armed Forces Post Graduate Medical Institute/National University of Medical Sciences (NUMS) Rawalpindi Pakistan
  • Naila Azam Department of Community, Foundation University Islamabad, Pakistan
  • Farooq Ikram Department of Paediatric, Combined Military Hospital/National University of Medical Sciences (NUMS) Rawalpindi Pakistan
  • Shizan Hamid Feroz Department of Anaesthesia, Combined Military Hospital/National University of Medical Sciences (NUMS) Rawalpindi Pakistan
  • Abid Khan Department of Anaesthesia, Pak Emirates Military Hospital/National University of Medical Sciences (NUMS) Rawalpindi Pakistan
  • Waqas Ranjha Department of Surgery, Armed Forces Institute of Urology/National University of Medical Sciences (NUMS) Rawalpindi Pakistan

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.51253/pafmj.v73i3.9189

Keywords:

Antimicrobial resistance, Single and combination antibiotic use, Third-generation cephalosporin

Abstract

Objective: To demonstrate the antibiotic usage and trends among paediatric patients admitted to the tertiary care hospital of Rawalpindi.

Study Design: Cross-sectional analytical study.

Place and Duration of Study: Paediatric In-Patient Department of two Tertiary Care Hospitals, in Rawalpindi Pakistan, from May to Dec 2021.

Methodology: After rigorous inclusion and exclusion criteria, 395 admitted patients of the paediatric ward were included in the study from two tertiary care hospitals in Rawalpindi through simple random sampling.

Results: A total of 395 patients were included; the mean age was 3.35±4.07 months, ranging from 0 to 45 months. 132(33.4%) patients from Hospital-A and 263(66.6%) from Hospital-B. Out of 395 patients, 35(8.7%) patients were given no Antibiotic, 240(60.8%) were given one antibiotic, 84(21.3%) patients were given two antibiotics, 33(8.3%) patients were given three antibiotics and 3(0.9%) patients were given four antibiotics. Of 360, 340(94.4 %) were given IV antibiotics, and 20(5.6%) were advised oral antibiotics.

Conclusion: The youngest children received the most antibiotic prescriptions, progressively decreasing as they aged. irrational use of antibiotics is a significant risk factor to cause antimicrobial resistance.

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Published

26-06-2023

How to Cite

1.
Iqbal S, Azam N, Ikram F, Feroz SH, Khan A, Ranjha W. Antibiotic Prescription Trends Among the Paediatric Population Admitted in Tertiary Care Hospitals of Rawalpindi. Pak Armed Forces Med J [Internet]. 2023 Jun. 26 [cited 2024 May 22];73(3):897-900. Available from: https://www.pafmj.org/PAFMJ/article/view/9189

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