Antibiotic prescribing amongst South African general practitioners in private practice: an analysis of a health insurance database

Author:

Alabi Mobolaji Eniola1ORCID,Essack Sabiha Yusuf1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Antimicrobial Research Unit, College of Health Sciences, University of Kwa-Zulu , Natal, Durban , South Africa

Abstract

Abstract Objectives To investigate the appropriateness of antibiotic prescribing among GPs in the private primary healthcare sector in South Africa. Methods An anonymized national database of claims for antibiotic prescriptions was obtained from a large medical insurer. Antibiotic prescriptions were categorized based on International Classification of Diseases (ICD-10) codes as ‘appropriate’, ‘potentially appropriate’ and ‘inappropriate’ using a classification scheme developed by Chua et al. (BMJ 2019; 364: k5092). Further assessments of antibiotic choice, dosage and duration of treatment were carried out to determine the appropriateness of ‘appropriate’ and ‘potentially appropriate’ prescriptions in comparison with treatment guidelines. Results In February 2018, 188 141 antibiotics were prescribed for 174 889 patients who consulted GPs in the private sector. Penicillins were the most frequently prescribed antibiotic class, making up 40.7% of all antibiotics prescribed. Amoxicillin/clavulanic acid was the most frequently prescribed antibiotic, making up 28.6% of all antibiotics prescribed. Diseases of the respiratory system generated the highest number of prescriptions, making up 46.1% of all diagnoses. Of all prescriptions, 8.8% were appropriate, 32.0% were potentially appropriate, 45.4% were inappropriate and 13.8% could not be assessed. Of the appropriately and potentially appropriately prescribed antibiotics, 30.8% were correct antibiotic selections. Of the correctly selected antibiotics for adults, 57.7% had correct doses. Of the antibiotics prescribed with correct doses for adults, 76.7% had correct dosage frequencies and durations of treatment. Conclusions The study revealed that antibiotics were frequently prescribed inappropriately by GPs in the private primary healthcare sector. There is thus a need to develop stewardship interventions in the sector.

Funder

South African Medical Research Council

University of KwaZulu-Natal

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

General Medicine

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