dc.description.abstract | The World Health Organization (WHO) qualified antimicrobial resistance
(AMR) as one of the principal threats to public health globally and inappropriate antibiotic
prescription is its modifiable contributor. Therefore assessing antibiotic prescriptions for
URTI is an acceptable way to analyze the appropriateness of the prescriptions. However,
there is a paucity of data regarding the pattern of antibiotic prescriptions in rural hospitals
in Kenya. This study seeks to profile the pattern of antibiotic prescriptions among underfives
with URTI in Tharaka-Nithi County, Kenya.
This was a retrospective charts review of under-fives treated from November 2018 to
December 2019 for URTI in outpatient clinics in Chogoria and Chuka hospitals. A
systematic sampling of 385 charts was carried out using the table of Robert and Morgan
based on the total of 5000 URTI cases recorded. Charts of children with suspected bacterial
infections were excluded, and for cases of tonsillitis, only children with a modified Centor
score ≤3 were included. The binary logistic regression was used to assess the association
between variables with the calculation of Odd ratio with a CI of 95% using SPSS 24.
This study found that 70.4% of under-fives with URTI were prescribed antibiotics. The
prescriptions were associated with the diagnosis of tonsillitis as part of the URTI, OR
21(95%CI 4.52-99.3); the level of education of the prescriber with clinical officers
prescribing more than medical officers, OR 15.9(95%CI 6.98-36.2) and the patient’s
proximity to the hospital, OR 1.77(95%CI 1.22-2.77).
Antibiotics were prescribed to 70.4% of URTI cases. This percentage was higher than the
30% expected by WHO and was significantly associated with the diagnosis of tonsillitis,
the level of education of the prescriber and hospital accessibility. There is a need to train
clinicians about the indications of antibiotic prescriptions and to implement antimicrobial
stewardship programs in rural facilities. | en_US |