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Routine data registries as a basis to analyse and improve the quality of antimicrobial prescription in primary care
Background
The overuse of antimicrobials is the main driver of the increasing antimicrobial resistance (AMR). Between 80 and 90% of antimicrobial prescriptions originate from primary care. The goals were to establish the quality of prescriptions through combining data from a primary healthcare registry and a national socioeconomic database for novel determinants.
Methods
Pseudonymized routine healthcare data from 269,547 patients (1,150,252 antimicrobial prescriptions) obtained between 2012 and 2020 from primary care practices (n = 101) in the region The Hague - Leiden were used. These data were linked with individual socioeconomic data from the Statistic Netherlands database to identify determinants of inappropriate antimicrobial prescribing. The quality of prescription was analysed using predefined criteria based on primary care guidelines. Multivariable logistic regression analyses were performed to identify associations with appropriateness.
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Background
The overuse of antimicrobials is the main driver of the increasing antimicrobial resistance (AMR). Between 80 and 90% of antimicrobial prescriptions originate from primary care. The goals were to establish the quality of prescriptions through combining data from a primary healthcare registry and a national socioeconomic database for novel determinants.
Methods
Pseudonymized routine healthcare data from 269,547 patients (1,150,252 antimicrobial prescriptions) obtained between 2012 and 2020 from primary care practices (n = 101) in the region The Hague - Leiden were used. These data were linked with individual socioeconomic data from the Statistic Netherlands database to identify determinants of inappropriate antimicrobial prescribing. The quality of prescription was analysed using predefined criteria based on primary care guidelines. Multivariable logistic regression analyses were performed to identify associations with appropriateness.
Results
Respiratory tract infections (RTI) were most commonly associated with inappropriate antibiotic prescribing, with 14.5% RTI prescriptions being inappropriate. For macrolide prescriptions, 77.1% did not correspond with 1st and 2nd guideline choices. Patient characteristics (migration backgrounds, female gender, comorbidities and age) and medium and large primary care practice size, a proxy for continuity of care and consultation time per patient, were associated with poorer guideline adherence.
Conclusions
Combined analyses of socioeconomic and routinely collected healthcare data does reveal relevant additional information to answer medical questions in a broader context, such as AMR. Most room for improvement was found for RTIs and macrolides, especially in specific risk groups. Assuring continuity of care and/or providing extended consultation time per patient might be essential elements to establish, before disseminating improvement strategies.
- All authors
- Sijbom, M.; Boelens, M.; Boer, M.G.J. de; Numans, M.E.
- Date
- 2025-10-17
- Journal
- BMC Primary Care
- Volume
- 26
- Issue
- 1