4.7 Article

Childhood Respiratory Outpatient Visits Correlate With Socioeconomic Status and Drive Geographic Patterns in Antibiotic Prescribing

Journal

JOURNAL OF INFECTIOUS DISEASES
Volume 223, Issue 12, Pages 2029-2037

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC
DOI: 10.1093/infdis/jiab218

Keywords

antibiotic prescribing; respiratory infection; social determinants of health; medical claims; antibiotic resistance

Funding

  1. Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health

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In Massachusetts, 45.2% of the difference in per capita antibiotic prescribing between high- and low-prescribing areas was attributable to variation in outpatient visit rates, while 25.8% was explained by prescribing practices. Outpatient visits for sinusitis, pharyngitis, and suppurative otitis media accounted for 30.3% of the gap in prescribing, with most of the variation in visit rates concentrated in children younger than 10 years old.
Background. Reducing geographic disparities in antibiotic prescribing is a central public health priority to combat antibiotic resistance, but drivers of this variation have been unclear. Methods. We measured how variation in outpatient visit rates (observed disease) and antibiotic prescribing rates per visit (prescribing practices) contributed to geographic variation in per capita antibiotic prescribing in Massachusetts residents younger than 65 years between 2011 and 2015. Results. Of the difference in per capita antibiotic prescribing between high- and low-prescribing census tracts in Massachusetts, 45.2% was attributable to variation in outpatient visit rates, while 25.8% was explained by prescribing practices. Outpatient visits for sinusitis, pharyngitis, and suppurative otitis media accounted for 30.3% of the gap in prescribing, with most of the variation in visit rates concentrated in children younger than 10 years. Outpatient visits for these conditions were less frequent in census tracts with high social deprivation index. Conclusions. Interventions aimed at reducing geographic disparities in antibiotic prescribing should target the drivers of outpatient visits for respiratory illness and should account for possible underutilization of health services in areas with the lowest antibiotic consumption. Our findings challenge the conventional wisdom that prescribing practices are the main driver of geographic disparities in antibiotic use.

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