Author: Gillies, Malcolm B.; Burgner, David P.; Ivancic, Lorraine; Nassar, Natasha; Miller, Jessica E.; Sullivan, Sheena G.; Todd, Isobel M. F.; Pearson, Sallieâ€Anne; Schaffer, Andrea L.; Zoega, Helga
Title: Changes in antibiotic prescribing following COVIDâ€19 restrictions: Lessons for postâ€pandemic antibiotic stewardship Cord-id: 0zoly1f2 Document date: 2021_8_17
ID: 0zoly1f2
Snippet: AIMS: Public health responses to reduce SARSâ€CoVâ€2 transmission have profoundly affected the epidemiology and management of other infections. We examined the impact of COVIDâ€19 restrictions on antibiotic dispensing in Australia. METHODS: We used national claims data to investigate antibiotic dispensing trends from November 2015 to October 2020 and whether changes reflected reductions in primary care consultations. We used interrupted time series analysis to quantify changes in monthly anti
Document: AIMS: Public health responses to reduce SARSâ€CoVâ€2 transmission have profoundly affected the epidemiology and management of other infections. We examined the impact of COVIDâ€19 restrictions on antibiotic dispensing in Australia. METHODS: We used national claims data to investigate antibiotic dispensing trends from November 2015 to October 2020 and whether changes reflected reductions in primary care consultations. We used interrupted time series analysis to quantify changes in monthly antibiotic dispensing and faceâ€toâ€face and telehealth GP consultations and examined changes by recipient age, pharmacy State and prescriber specialty. RESULTS: Over the study period, an estimated 19 921 370 people had 125 495 137 antibiotic dispensings, 71% prescribed by GPs. Following COVIDâ€19 restrictions, we observed a sustained 36% (95% CI: 33–40%) reduction in antibiotic dispensings from April 2020. Antibiotics recommended for managing respiratory tract infections showed large reductions (range 51–69%), whereas those recommended for nonâ€respiratory infections were unchanged. Dispensings prescribed by GPs decreased from 63.5 per 1000 population for April–October 2019 to 37.0 per 1000 for April–October 2020. Total GP consultation rates remained stable, but from April 2020, 31% of consultations were telehealth. CONCLUSION: In a setting with a low COVIDâ€19 incidence, restrictions were associated with a substantial reduction in community dispensings of antibiotics primarily used to treat respiratory infections, coincident with reported reductions in respiratory viral infections. Our findings are informative for postâ€pandemic antimicrobial stewardship and highlight the potential to reduce inappropriate prescribing by GPs and specialists for respiratory viral infections.
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