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Antibiotic Treatment and Length of Hospital Stay in Relation to Delivery Mode and Prematurity.

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posted on 2024-10-25, 13:19 authored by Katia M Ahlén, Anne ÖrtqvistAnne Örtqvist, Tong GongTong Gong, Alva Wallas, Weimin YeWeimin Ye, Cecilia LundholmCecilia Lundholm, Catarina Almqvist MalmrosCatarina Almqvist Malmros
AIM: To investigate how 1) maternal delivery mode and 2) prematurity in infants are associated to antibiotic treatment and length of hospital stay. METHODS: Women having given birth and infants 0-12 months discharged from hospital between July 2005 and November 2011 were identified from the Swedish National Patient Register. Medical records were reviewed for 203 women and 527 infants. The risk ratio (RR) between antibiotic treatment and 1) delivery mode in women; 2) prematurity in infants was calculated. Length of stay and days of antibiotic therapy were compared by Wilcoxon rank-sum test. RESULTS: Women: There was an association between emergency caesarean section (CS) and antibiotic treatment (RR 5.0 95% confidence interval (CI) 2.2-11.5), but not for elective CS. Length of stay was longer for CS (emergency and elective) compared to vaginal delivery (p<0.01). Infants: RR for antibiotic treatment in preterm compared to term infants was 1.4 (95% CI 1.0-1.9). Length of stay (p<0.01), but not days of therapy (p = 0.17), was higher in preterm compared to term infants. CONCLUSION: We found that emergency CS increased the probability of maternal antibiotic treatment during hospitalisation, but no difference was found between term and preterm infants. The results are well aligned with current guidelines and may be considered in future studies on the effects of antibiotics.

Funding

Unique registers and advanced family designs to address causes and consequences of common childhood disorders : Swedish Research Council | 2013-05867_VR

Fetal growth impairment and catch-up growth - from genes to teens in kin and twin : Swedish Research Council | 2011-03060_VR

History

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  • Published

Publication status

Published online

Sub type

Article

Journal

PLoS One

ISSN

1932-6203

eISSN

1932-6203

Volume

11

Issue

10

Article number

0164126

Language

  • eng

Original self archiving date

2017-01-02

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