• J Paediatr Child Health · Nov 2019

    Paediatric use of antibiotics in children with community acquired pneumonia: A survey from Da Nang, Vietnam.

    • Phuong Tk Nguyen, Hoang T Tran, Huong Tt Truong, Vu T Nguyen, Steve M Graham, and Ben J Marais.
    • Discipline of Paediatrics and Adolescent Medicine, Children's Hospital at Westmead, University of Sydney, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia.
    • J Paediatr Child Health. 2019 Nov 1; 55 (11): 1329-1334.

    AimTo characterise paediatricians' antibiotic-prescribing behaviour when managing community acquired pneumonia.MethodsWe conducted a knowledge and attitudes survey of paediatric doctors practicing at a regional provincial hospital in central Vietnam over a 2-week period (from 12 December 2017 to 29 December 2017).ResultsOf 79 eligible paediatric doctors, 69 (87.3%) completed the questionnaire, of whom 65 (94.2%) thought that antibiotics were overused in Vietnam. Thirty-eight doctors (55.1%) indicated that they routinely hospitalised children with pneumonia to provide intravenous antibiotics. Most doctors reported discharging children with non-severe pneumonia after 5 days (76.9%) and those with severe pneumonia after 7-10 days (88.4%); older doctors generally continued intravenous antibiotics for longer. The two most important factors driving discharge decisions were clinical assessment (95.6%) and completion of the full course of intravenous antibiotics (80.0%). Antibiotic prescription was influenced by local guidelines (62.3%), drugs used before admission (50.0%) and the opinion of senior clinicians (37.7%). Most doctors believed antibiotic stewardship was necessary (98.6%) and that over-the-counter use of antibiotics should be restricted (97.1%).ConclusionsPaediatricians recognised an urgent need for more effective regulation and antibiotic stewardship in Vietnam. Routinely completing a full course of intravenous antibiotics leads to unnecessary and prolonged hospitalisation.© 2019 Paediatrics and Child Health Division (The Royal Australasian College of Physicians).

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