Karolinska Institutet
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Individual maternal and child exposure to antibiotics in hospital - a national population-based validation study.

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AIM: Exposure to antibiotics in early life may affect future health. Most antibiotics are prescribed in outpatient care, but inpatient exposure is also important. We estimated how specific diagnoses in hospitals corresponded to individual antibiotic exposure. METHODS: All pregnant women and children from birth to 5 years of age with infectious diseases and common inpatient diagnoses between July 2005 and November 2011 were identified from the Swedish National Patient Register. Random samples of individuals from predefined groups were drawn, and medical records received from the clinics were manually reviewed for antibiotics. RESULTS: Medical records for 4319 hospital visits were requested and 3797 (88%) were received. A quarter (25%) of children diagnosed as premature had received antibiotics, and in children from one to 5 years of age, diagnoses associated with bacterial infections were more commonly treated with antibiotics (62.4-90.6%) than those associated with viruses (6.3-22.2%). Pregnant women who had undergone a Caesarean section were more likely to be treated with antibiotics than those who had had a vaginal delivery (40.1% versus 11.1%). CONCLUSION: This study defines the proportion of new mothers and young children who received individual antibiotic treatment for specific inpatient diagnoses in Sweden and provides a useful basis for future studies focusing on antibiotic use.

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

File version

  • Accepted manuscript

Publication status

Published

Sub type

Article

Journal

Acta Paediatr

ISSN

0803-5253

eISSN

1651-2227

Volume

104

Issue

4

Pagination

392-395

Language

  • eng

Original self archiving date

2017-07-07

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