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首页> 外文期刊>The Lancet Global Health >Trends in reported antibiotic use among children under 5 years of age with fever, diarrhoea, or cough with fast or difficult breathing across low-income and middle-income countries in 2005–17: a systematic analysis of 132 national surveys from 73 countries
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Trends in reported antibiotic use among children under 5 years of age with fever, diarrhoea, or cough with fast or difficult breathing across low-income and middle-income countries in 2005–17: a systematic analysis of 132 national surveys from 73 countries

机译:报告的趋势在2005 - 17年在低收入和中等收入国家的发烧,腹泻或咳嗽不足的5岁以下儿童的抗生素使用抗生素使用:来自73个国家的132个国家调查系统分析

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Background Global assessments of antibiotic consumption have relied on pharmaceutical sales data that do not measure individual-level use, and are often unreliable or unavailable for low-income and middle-income countries (LMICs). To help fill this evidence gap, we compiled data from national surveys in LMICs in 2005–17 reporting antibiotic use for sick children under the age of 5 years. Methods Based on 132 Demographic and Health Surveys and Multiple Indicator Cluster Surveys from 73 LMICs, we analysed trends in reported antibiotic use among children under 5 years of age with fever, diarrhoea, or cough with fast or difficult breathing by WHO region, World Bank income classification, and symptom complaint. A logit transformation was used to estimate the outcome using a linear Bayesian regression model. The model included country-level socioeconomic, disease incidence, and health system covariates to generate estimates for country-years with missing values. Findings Across LMICs, reported antibiotic use among sick children under 5 years of age increased from 36·8% (uncertainty interval [UI] 28·8–44·7) in 2005 to 43·1% (33·2–50·5) in 2017. Low-income countries had the greatest relative increase; in these countries, reported antibiotic use for sick children under 5 years of age rose 34% during the study period, from 29·6% (21·2–41·1) in 2005 to 39·5% (32·9–47·6) in 2017, although it remained the lowest of any income group throughout the study period. Interpretation We found a limited but steady increase in reported antibiotic use for sick children under 5 years of age across LMICs in 2005–17, although overlapping UIs complicate interpretation. The increase was largely driven by gains in low-income countries. Our study expands the evidence base from LMICs, where strengthening antibiotic consumption and resistance surveillance is a global health priority. Funding Uppsala Antibiotic Centre, Uppsala University, Uppsala University Hospital, Makerere University, Gothenburg University.
机译:背景技术抗生素消费的全球评估依赖于不衡量单独使用的药物销售数据,并且对于低收入和中等收入国家(LMIC)通常不可靠或不可用。为了帮助填补这一证据差距,我们在2005 - 17年在2005 - 17年举行了2005 - 17年的国家调查中的数据,报告了5岁以下的病人儿童的抗生素使用。根据132个人口统计和健康调查的方法,从73 LMICS提供多种指标群体调查,我们分析了在5岁以下的儿童中患有发烧,腹泻或咳嗽的儿童的趋势,并通过WHO地区,世界银行收入快速或困难地呼吸分类和症状投诉。使用线性贝叶斯回归模型来使用Logit转换来估算结果。该模型包括国家级社会经济,疾病发病率和卫生系统协变者,以产生缺失价值的国家 - 年的估计数。在2005年的36·8%(不确定间隔[UI] 28·8-44·7)中,患病儿童的调查结果,患病儿童减少5岁以下的病症,2005年至43·1%(33·2-50·5 )2017年。低收入国家的相对增长最大;在这些国家,在研究期间报道,5岁以下病人的抗生素用途增长了34%,2005年的29·6%(21·2-41·1)至39·5%(32·9-47 ·6)在2017年,虽然它在整个研究期间仍然是任何收入组的最低群体。解释我们在2005 - 17年在LMICs在2005 - 17年跨越5岁以下的病人儿童的报告抗生素用途的有限但稳步增加,尽管重叠的uis复杂解释。在低收入国家的增加,增加的增加是在很大程度上推动的。我们的研究扩展了LMIC的证据基础,其中加强抗生素消费和抵抗监测是全球卫生优先事项。资助乌普萨拉大学乌普萨拉大学,乌普萨拉大学,哥德堡大学乌普萨拉大学抗生素中心。

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