Antibiotic use among patients with febrile illness in a low malaria endemicity setting in Uganda

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Antibiotic use among patients with febrile illness in a low malaria endemicity setting in Uganda. / Batwala, Vincent; Magnussen, Pascal; Nuwaha, Fred.

In: Malaria Journal, Vol. 10, No. 377, 2011.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Batwala, V, Magnussen, P & Nuwaha, F 2011, 'Antibiotic use among patients with febrile illness in a low malaria endemicity setting in Uganda', Malaria Journal, vol. 10, no. 377. https://doi.org/10.1186/1475-2875-10-377

APA

Batwala, V., Magnussen, P., & Nuwaha, F. (2011). Antibiotic use among patients with febrile illness in a low malaria endemicity setting in Uganda. Malaria Journal, 10(377). https://doi.org/10.1186/1475-2875-10-377

Vancouver

Batwala V, Magnussen P, Nuwaha F. Antibiotic use among patients with febrile illness in a low malaria endemicity setting in Uganda. Malaria Journal. 2011;10(377). https://doi.org/10.1186/1475-2875-10-377

Author

Batwala, Vincent ; Magnussen, Pascal ; Nuwaha, Fred. / Antibiotic use among patients with febrile illness in a low malaria endemicity setting in Uganda. In: Malaria Journal. 2011 ; Vol. 10, No. 377.

Bibtex

@article{109c5372f93b4a248ffefef5db135eed,
title = "Antibiotic use among patients with febrile illness in a low malaria endemicity setting in Uganda",
abstract = "Background: Uganda embraced the World Health Organization guidelines that recommend a universal 'test and treat' strategy for malaria, mainly by use of rapid diagnostic test (RDT) and microscopy. However, little is known how increased parasitological diagnosis for malaria influences antibiotic treatment among patients with febrile illness. Methods: Data collection was carried out within a feasibility trial of presumptive diagnosis of malaria (control) and two diagnostic interventions (microscopy or RDT) in a district of low transmission intensity. Five primary level health centres (HCs) were randomized to each diagnostic arm (diagnostic method in a defined group of patients). All 52,116 outpatients (presumptive 16,971; microscopy 17,508; and RDT 17,638) aged 5 months to ninety five years presenting with fever (by statement or measured) were included. Information from outpatients and laboratory registers was extracted weekly from March 2010 to July 2011. The proportion of patients who were prescribed antibiotics was calculated among those not tested for malaria, those who tested positive and in those who tested negative. Results: Seven thousand and forty (41.5%) patients in the presumptive arm were prescribed antibiotics. Of the patients not tested for malaria, 1,537 (23.9%) in microscopy arm and 810 (56.2%) in RDT arm were prescribed antibiotics. Among patients who tested positive for malaria, 845 (25.8%) were prescribed antibiotics in the RDT and 273(17.6%) in the microscopy arm. Among patients who tested negative for malaria, 7809 (61.4%) were prescribed antibiotics in the RDT and 3749 (39.3%) in the microscopy arm. Overall the prescription of antibiotics was more common for children less than five years of age 5,388 (63%) compared to those five years and above 16798 (38.6%) . Conclusion: Prescription of antibiotics in patients with febrile illness is high. Testing positive for malaria reduces antibiotic treatment but testing negative for malaria increases use of antibiotics.",
keywords = "Antibiotic treatment, febrile patients, malaria diagnosis",
author = "Vincent Batwala and Pascal Magnussen and Fred Nuwaha",
year = "2011",
doi = "10.1186/1475-2875-10-377",
language = "English",
volume = "10",
journal = "Malaria Journal",
issn = "1475-2875",
publisher = "BioMed Central",
number = "377",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Antibiotic use among patients with febrile illness in a low malaria endemicity setting in Uganda

AU - Batwala, Vincent

AU - Magnussen, Pascal

AU - Nuwaha, Fred

PY - 2011

Y1 - 2011

N2 - Background: Uganda embraced the World Health Organization guidelines that recommend a universal 'test and treat' strategy for malaria, mainly by use of rapid diagnostic test (RDT) and microscopy. However, little is known how increased parasitological diagnosis for malaria influences antibiotic treatment among patients with febrile illness. Methods: Data collection was carried out within a feasibility trial of presumptive diagnosis of malaria (control) and two diagnostic interventions (microscopy or RDT) in a district of low transmission intensity. Five primary level health centres (HCs) were randomized to each diagnostic arm (diagnostic method in a defined group of patients). All 52,116 outpatients (presumptive 16,971; microscopy 17,508; and RDT 17,638) aged 5 months to ninety five years presenting with fever (by statement or measured) were included. Information from outpatients and laboratory registers was extracted weekly from March 2010 to July 2011. The proportion of patients who were prescribed antibiotics was calculated among those not tested for malaria, those who tested positive and in those who tested negative. Results: Seven thousand and forty (41.5%) patients in the presumptive arm were prescribed antibiotics. Of the patients not tested for malaria, 1,537 (23.9%) in microscopy arm and 810 (56.2%) in RDT arm were prescribed antibiotics. Among patients who tested positive for malaria, 845 (25.8%) were prescribed antibiotics in the RDT and 273(17.6%) in the microscopy arm. Among patients who tested negative for malaria, 7809 (61.4%) were prescribed antibiotics in the RDT and 3749 (39.3%) in the microscopy arm. Overall the prescription of antibiotics was more common for children less than five years of age 5,388 (63%) compared to those five years and above 16798 (38.6%) . Conclusion: Prescription of antibiotics in patients with febrile illness is high. Testing positive for malaria reduces antibiotic treatment but testing negative for malaria increases use of antibiotics.

AB - Background: Uganda embraced the World Health Organization guidelines that recommend a universal 'test and treat' strategy for malaria, mainly by use of rapid diagnostic test (RDT) and microscopy. However, little is known how increased parasitological diagnosis for malaria influences antibiotic treatment among patients with febrile illness. Methods: Data collection was carried out within a feasibility trial of presumptive diagnosis of malaria (control) and two diagnostic interventions (microscopy or RDT) in a district of low transmission intensity. Five primary level health centres (HCs) were randomized to each diagnostic arm (diagnostic method in a defined group of patients). All 52,116 outpatients (presumptive 16,971; microscopy 17,508; and RDT 17,638) aged 5 months to ninety five years presenting with fever (by statement or measured) were included. Information from outpatients and laboratory registers was extracted weekly from March 2010 to July 2011. The proportion of patients who were prescribed antibiotics was calculated among those not tested for malaria, those who tested positive and in those who tested negative. Results: Seven thousand and forty (41.5%) patients in the presumptive arm were prescribed antibiotics. Of the patients not tested for malaria, 1,537 (23.9%) in microscopy arm and 810 (56.2%) in RDT arm were prescribed antibiotics. Among patients who tested positive for malaria, 845 (25.8%) were prescribed antibiotics in the RDT and 273(17.6%) in the microscopy arm. Among patients who tested negative for malaria, 7809 (61.4%) were prescribed antibiotics in the RDT and 3749 (39.3%) in the microscopy arm. Overall the prescription of antibiotics was more common for children less than five years of age 5,388 (63%) compared to those five years and above 16798 (38.6%) . Conclusion: Prescription of antibiotics in patients with febrile illness is high. Testing positive for malaria reduces antibiotic treatment but testing negative for malaria increases use of antibiotics.

KW - Antibiotic treatment

KW - febrile patients

KW - malaria diagnosis

U2 - 10.1186/1475-2875-10-377

DO - 10.1186/1475-2875-10-377

M3 - Journal article

VL - 10

JO - Malaria Journal

JF - Malaria Journal

SN - 1475-2875

IS - 377

ER -

ID: 36029273