Audit of compliance to recommended antibiotics prescription guidelines in the management of community-acquired pneumonia in a children's outpatient clinic, in Portharcourt, Nigeria

Authors

  • Uchenna C. Onubogu Department of Paediatrics and Child Health, Rivers State University Teaching Hospital, Portharcourt, Rivers State, Nigeria
  • Obuoma U. Amaewhule Department of Paediatrics and Child Health, Rivers State University Teaching Hospital, Portharcourt, Rivers State, Nigeria
  • Ijeoma N. Amadi Department of Paediatrics and Child Health, Rivers State University Teaching Hospital, Portharcourt, Rivers State, Nigeria
  • Chineye C. Leechi-Okere Department of Paediatrics and Child Health, Rivers State University Teaching Hospital, Portharcourt, Rivers State, Nigeria

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.18203/2349-3291.ijcp20243074

Keywords:

Community-acquired pneumonia, Compliance, Paediatric association of Nigeria, Guidelines, Pneumonia, Antibiotics, Prescription, Noncompliance, Children

Abstract

Background: The Paediatric Association of Nigeria produced a guideline for managing and diagnosing community-acquired pneumonia. This study aims to assess compliance with the recommended antibiotics prescriptions. 

Methods: A prospective review of the folders of children who presented with cough symptoms in the children's general outpatient clinic of Rivers State University Teaching Hospital. Their biodata, clinical examination findings, prior antibiotics exposure, and consult outcome were retrieved and analyzed.

Results: A total 253 children with a median age of 3 years were studied from June to September 2022. No pneumonia was seen in 128 (50.6%), while 93 (36.8%) had various severity of Pneumonia. Antibiotics had been taken by 55 (21.7%) of the children before presentation. Antibiotics were prescribed in 210 (83.0%) of all the consultations for symptoms of cough. The antibiotic prescription rate for children with No pneumonia was 108 (84.4%), Pneumonia was 77 (88.5%) and severe pneumonia was 5 (83.3%). Cephalosporins were the most common type of antibiotics prescribed for Pneumonia and severe pneumonia at a rate of 52.6% and 57.1% respectively. The overall compliance rate with the PAN recommendations for antibiotic treatment guidelines was 42.5%. Children with No pneumonia significantly had higher odds of being managed with prescriptions that were not in line with the recommendation (OR;25.4, 95% CI:12.2,52.7, p<0.05). The highest type of Noncompliance was prescribing antibiotics where it was not indicated 109 (85.8%).

Conclusions: Compliance with PAN recommendations for antibiotics treatment in community-acquired pneumonia is suboptimal. While the production of guidelines is excellent in standardizing health care, more work is needed to ensure these guidelines are utilized. 

Metrics

Metrics Loading ...

References

Pneumonia in children. 2022. Available at: https://www.who.int/news-room/fact-sheets/detail. Accessed on 17th March 2024.

Nigeria contributes highest number to global pneumonia child deaths. 2011. Available at: https://www.unicef.org/nigeria/press-releases.

Mukisa LN, Okuuny V, Besigye I. Antibiotic prescription among children with common cold at a district hospital in Uganda. Afr J Prim Health Care Fam Med. 2023;15(1):4106.

Olowu A, Elusiyan JB, Esangbedo D, Ekure EN, Esezobor C FA. Management of community acquired pneumonia (CAP) in children: Clinical practice guidelines by the Paediatrics Association of Nigeria (PAN). Niger J Paediatr. 2015;42(4):283-92.

Osarogiagbon OW, Ayuk AC, Meremikwu M, Oguonu T, Umar LW GI. Management of community acquired pneumonia (CAP) in children: clinical practice guidelines by the paediatric association of Nigeria (PAN). Niger J Paediatr. 2022;49(3):210-39.

Gabriel-Job N, Azubogu US. Prevalence and pattern of pneumonia among children admitted into university of portharcourt teaching hospital: a two-year review. Int J Trop Dis Health. 2019;1-6.

Word Health Organization (WHO). Revised WHO classification and treatment of childhood pneumonia at health facilities. Available at: https://iris.who.int/bitstream/handle. Accessed on 17th March 2024.

Ahmad A, Khan MU, Malik S, Mohanta GP, Parimalakrishnan S, Patel I, et al. Prescription patterns and appropriateness of antibiotics in the management of cough/cold and diarrhea in a rural tertiary care teaching hospital. J Pharm Bio Allied Sci. 2016;8(4):335-40.

Oliveira I, Rego C, Semedo G, Gomes D, Figueiras A, Roque F, et al. Systematic review on the impact of guidelines adherence on antibiotic prescription in respiratory infections. Antibiot Basel Switz. 2020;9(9):546.

McLaren SH. Mistry RD, Neuman MI, Florin TA DP. Guideline adherence in diagnostic testing and treatment of community-acquired pneumonia in children. Pediatr Emerg Care. 2021;37(10):485-93.

Dambrava PG, Torres A, Valle`s X, Mensa J, Marcos MPA. Adherence to guidelines’ empirical antibiotic recommendations and community-acquired pneumonia outcome. Eur Respir J. 2008;32(4):892-901.

Williams DJ, Edwards KM, Self WH, Zhu Y, Ampofo K, Pavia AT, et al. Antibiotic choice for children hospitalized with pneumonia and adherence to National guidelines. Paediatrics. 2015;136(1):44-52.

Porter G, Kotwani A., Bhullar L, Joshi J. Over-the-counter sales of antibiotics for human use in India: The challenges and opportunities for regulation. Medical Law International. Med Law Int. 2021;21(2):147-73.

Downloads

Published

2024-10-24

How to Cite

Onubogu, U. C., Amaewhule, O. U., Amadi, I. N., & Leechi-Okere, C. C. (2024). Audit of compliance to recommended antibiotics prescription guidelines in the management of community-acquired pneumonia in a children’s outpatient clinic, in Portharcourt, Nigeria. International Journal of Contemporary Pediatrics, 11(11), 1512–1518. https://doi.org/10.18203/2349-3291.ijcp20243074

Issue

Section

Original Research Articles