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Prescribing practices in the treatment of wasting: secondary analysis from a randomised trial
Prescribing practices in the treatment of wasting: secondary analysis from a randomised trial
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Prescribing practices in the treatment of wasting: secondary analysis from a randomised trial
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Prescribing practices in the treatment of wasting: secondary analysis from a randomised trial
Prescribing practices in the treatment of wasting: secondary analysis from a randomised trial

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Prescribing practices in the treatment of wasting: secondary analysis from a randomised trial
Prescribing practices in the treatment of wasting: secondary analysis from a randomised trial
Journal Article

Prescribing practices in the treatment of wasting: secondary analysis from a randomised trial

2024
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Overview
IntroductionCurrent guidelines for the outpatient treatment of severe acute malnutrition (SAM) recommend the provision of routine medications to all children at admission and prescribed medications as clinically indicated thereafter. The objective of this study was to describe the amount and purpose of medications prescribed during outpatient SAM treatment and explore the effect of routine antibiotics at admission on subsequent medication prescription.MethodsMedications prescribed during outpatient treatment were described by medication category, time from admission, and diagnoses among children with SAM in a placebo-controlled, double-blind trial of 7-day amoxicillin use. Total medications were compared by parent trial intervention arm (amoxicillin vs placebo) and differences assessed using Χ2 and two-sample t-tests.ResultsOf the 2399 children enrolled, 74.6% of children received ≥1 prescribed medication during outpatient treatment. Antipyretics/analgesics (44.1% of children), antimalarials (56.6%) and antibiotics (30.0%) were prescribed most frequently. Children who received placebo in the parent trial received fewer total medications (mean difference: −0.80, 95% CI: −0.96 to –0.65) and oral antibiotics (mean difference: −0.96, 95% CI: −0.99 to –0.92) during treatment compared with children who received routine amoxicillin.ConclusionsWe found high rates of medication prescription during outpatient treatment for SAM, but fewer total medications and oral antibiotics prescribed to children receiving placebo in the parent trial. Our findings underscore the role of outpatient treatment programmes as an important source of medicine prescription and suggest that provision of antibiotics on a clinically indicated basis for outpatient SAM cases may be a strategy to support prudent antibiotic use in certain settings.Trial registration numberClinicalTrials.gov Registry (NCT01613547; https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT01613547).
Publisher
BMJ Publishing Group Ltd,BMJ Publishing Group LTD,BMJ Publishing Group