Overprescribing of antibiotics to children in rural Vietnam

Abstract
100 children (aged 1–6 y), who received an antibiotic prescription after health examination in the Bavi health care system (79 children at a district hospital, 21 at a community health centre) were analysed regarding antibiotics prescribed in relation to serum C-reactive protein (CRP). A control group consisted of 35 healthy children. Children who had been treated with antibiotics within 1 week prior to the study were excluded in the community health centre and control groups. Capillary blood samples were collected and the serum CRP concentration was analysed. A questionnaire interview with the carers was performed. Elevated CRP concentrations (>10 mg/l) were detected in 17(17%) of the study population, and only 2 had a CRP level above 25 mg/l, one 36 mg/l and the other 140 mg/l. In the control group, none of the children had elevated CRP. The most common diagnoses were acute respiratory tract infection (ARI, 55%), asthma (7%), tonsillitis (4%), and diarrhoea (4%). The average number of drugs per patient was 3.1, and 77% received vitamins and 15% corticosteroids in combination with antibiotics. A majority of children who received an antibiotic prescription based on clinical examination did not have an elevated CRP and overprescribing of antibiotics was thus indicated.