Antibacterial use by birth year and birth season in children 0-2 years in Norway

Introduction: Consumption of antibacterials in children follows seasonal cycles, and time to first treatment depends on birth season. The aim of this study was to describe dispensing rate, one-year periodic prevalence, and age at first prescription in children aged 0-2 years in Norway. Methods: We...

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Main Authors: Sanna Beckstrøm, Kristian Svendsen, Lars Småbrekke
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Norsk Forening for Epidemiologi 2021-08-01
Series:Norsk Epidemiologi
Online Access:https://www.ntnu.no/ojs/index.php/norepid/article/view/4044
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spelling doaj-3652ae6620c948c78a82f5baacdbc5482021-08-23T13:55:03ZengNorsk Forening for EpidemiologiNorsk Epidemiologi0803-24912021-08-01291-210.5324/nje.v29i1-2.4044Antibacterial use by birth year and birth season in children 0-2 years in Norway Sanna Beckstrøm0Kristian Svendsen1Lars Småbrekke2Department of pharmacy, Faculty of Health Sciences, UiT the Arctic University of Norway, Vitusapotek Byåsen Butikksenter, TrondheimDepartment of pharmacy, Faculty of Health Sciences, UiT the Arctic University of Norway Vitusapotek Byåsen Butikksenter, Trondheim Introduction: Consumption of antibacterials in children follows seasonal cycles, and time to first treatment depends on birth season. The aim of this study was to describe dispensing rate, one-year periodic prevalence, and age at first prescription in children aged 0-2 years in Norway. Methods: We used data from the Norwegian prescription database and included all dispensed prescriptions on systemic antibacterials in 2008-2017 during the first three years of life to children born 2005-2014. We calculated age by subtracting birth month and birth year from date of collection of prescription. We used multiple linear regression to investigate the effect of birth season on age at first dispensed prescription. Results: We included 714 262 prescriptions to 281 888 individuals (53.1% boys). In 2016, one-year-old boys had the highest periodic prevalence (35.6%) and the highest dispense rate (545/1000 individuals), followed by one-year-old girls (32.6%, 478/1000 individuals). The lowest prevalence and dispense rate in all age groups was found towards the end of the period. Winter months had the highest proportion of dispensed prescriptions, and children born in autumn were significantly younger when collecting their first prescription. On average, boys collected their first prescription 26 days younger compared to girls. Conclusion: One-year-olds have the highest periodic prevalence and the highest dispense rate. This contrast with results from other studies on Norwegian data and is probably attributed to our use of birth month for calculation of age. Children born in autumn were younger when collecting their first prescription compared to other birth seasons. It is unknown whether this has any long-term clinical implications. https://www.ntnu.no/ojs/index.php/norepid/article/view/4044
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sanna Beckstrøm
Kristian Svendsen
Lars Småbrekke
spellingShingle Sanna Beckstrøm
Kristian Svendsen
Lars Småbrekke
Antibacterial use by birth year and birth season in children 0-2 years in Norway
Norsk Epidemiologi
author_facet Sanna Beckstrøm
Kristian Svendsen
Lars Småbrekke
author_sort Sanna Beckstrøm
title Antibacterial use by birth year and birth season in children 0-2 years in Norway
title_short Antibacterial use by birth year and birth season in children 0-2 years in Norway
title_full Antibacterial use by birth year and birth season in children 0-2 years in Norway
title_fullStr Antibacterial use by birth year and birth season in children 0-2 years in Norway
title_full_unstemmed Antibacterial use by birth year and birth season in children 0-2 years in Norway
title_sort antibacterial use by birth year and birth season in children 0-2 years in norway
publisher Norsk Forening for Epidemiologi
series Norsk Epidemiologi
issn 0803-2491
publishDate 2021-08-01
description Introduction: Consumption of antibacterials in children follows seasonal cycles, and time to first treatment depends on birth season. The aim of this study was to describe dispensing rate, one-year periodic prevalence, and age at first prescription in children aged 0-2 years in Norway. Methods: We used data from the Norwegian prescription database and included all dispensed prescriptions on systemic antibacterials in 2008-2017 during the first three years of life to children born 2005-2014. We calculated age by subtracting birth month and birth year from date of collection of prescription. We used multiple linear regression to investigate the effect of birth season on age at first dispensed prescription. Results: We included 714 262 prescriptions to 281 888 individuals (53.1% boys). In 2016, one-year-old boys had the highest periodic prevalence (35.6%) and the highest dispense rate (545/1000 individuals), followed by one-year-old girls (32.6%, 478/1000 individuals). The lowest prevalence and dispense rate in all age groups was found towards the end of the period. Winter months had the highest proportion of dispensed prescriptions, and children born in autumn were significantly younger when collecting their first prescription. On average, boys collected their first prescription 26 days younger compared to girls. Conclusion: One-year-olds have the highest periodic prevalence and the highest dispense rate. This contrast with results from other studies on Norwegian data and is probably attributed to our use of birth month for calculation of age. Children born in autumn were younger when collecting their first prescription compared to other birth seasons. It is unknown whether this has any long-term clinical implications.
url https://www.ntnu.no/ojs/index.php/norepid/article/view/4044
work_keys_str_mv AT sannabeckstrøm antibacterialusebybirthyearandbirthseasoninchildren02yearsinnorway
AT kristiansvendsen antibacterialusebybirthyearandbirthseasoninchildren02yearsinnorway
AT larssmabrekke antibacterialusebybirthyearandbirthseasoninchildren02yearsinnorway
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