Common infections and antibiotic prescribing during the first year of the covid-19 pandemic: A primary care-based observational cohort study

Publication date

2021-12-13

Authors

Boeijen, Josi A
van der Velden, AlikeISNI 0000000395418997
Hullegie, SaskiaORCID 0000-0003-3413-1423
Platteel, Tamara N
Zwart, Dorien LORCID 0000-0003-0098-4882
Damoiseaux, Roger A M JORCID 0000-0001-8052-0302ISNI 0000000390478042
Venekamp, Roderick PORCID 0000-0002-1446-9614ISNI 0000000393819260
van de Pol, ACISNI 0000000394392799

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Article

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Abstract

Presentation and antibiotic prescribing for common infectious disease episodes decreased substantially during the first COVID-19 pandemic wave in Dutch general practice. We set out to determine the course of these variables during the first pandemic year. We conducted a retrospective observational cohort study using routine health care data from the Julius General Practitioners’ Network. All patients registered in the pre-pandemic year (n = 425,129) and/or during the first pandemic year (n = 432,122) were included. Relative risks for the number of infectious disease episodes (respiratory tract/ear, urinary tract, gastrointestinal, and skin), in total and those treated with antibiotics, and proportions of episodes treated with antibiotics (prescription rates) were calculated. Compared to the pre-pandemic year, primary care presentation for common infections remained lower during the full first pandemic year (RR, 0.77; CI, 0.76–0.78), mainly attributed to a sustained decline in respiratory tract/ear and gastrointestinal infection episodes. Presentation for urinary tract and skin infection episodes declined during the first wave, but returned to pre-pandemic levels during the second and start of the third wave. Antibiotic prescription rates were lower during the full first pandemic year (24%) as compared to the pre-pandemic year (28%), mainly attributed to a 10% lower prescription rate for respiratory tract/ear infections; the latter was not accompanied by an increase in complications. The decline in primary care presentation for common infections during the full first COVID-19 pandemic year, together with lower prescription rates for respiratory tract/ear infections, resulted in a substantial reduction in antibiotic prescribing in Dutch primary care.

Keywords

Antibiotic, Complications, COVID-19, Incidence, Infectious disease, Pandemic, Routine care data, Microbiology, Biochemistry, Pharmacology, Toxicology and Pharmaceutics(all), Microbiology (medical), Infectious Diseases, Pharmacology (medical), Journal Article

Citation

Boeijen, J A, van der Velden, A W, Hullegie, S, Platteel, T N, Zwart, D L M, Damoiseaux, R A M J, Venekamp, R P & van de Pol, A C 2021, 'Common infections and antibiotic prescribing during the first year of the covid-19 pandemic : A primary care-based observational cohort study', Antibiotics [E], vol. 10, no. 12, 1521, pp. 1-12. https://doi.org/10.3390/antibiotics10121521