Too many antibiotics for New Zealand children
Too many antibiotics for New Zealand children
Media
Release
University of
Auckland
16 March
2017
Too many antibiotics for New
Zealand children
Almost all New Zealand children have taken antibiotic medications by the time they are five years of age, according to new research from the University of Auckland’s Centre for Longitudinal Research – He Ara Ki Mua.
The study authors were concerned that prescribing such a lot of antibiotics for young children unnecessarily could have serious long term consequences, most importantly encouraging the spread of antibiotic resistant bacteria.
The research, published today in the Journal of Antimicrobial Chemotherapy, describes community antibiotic dispensing for more than 5,000 children in the contemporary longitudinal study of child development Growing Up in New Zealand, during their first five years.
Dispensing data was obtained, with parental consent, through linkage with national pharmaceutical dispensing records.
By five years of age almost all children (97 percent) had received one or more antibiotic courses with a median of eight courses per child and an average rate of almost two courses per child per year.
Study author and infectious disease specialist Dr Mark Hobbs, says that overall levels of antibiotic dispensing in New Zealand are higher than in the United States and many European countries with the highest levels being for young children and the elderly.
“In this study, we found that Māori and Pacific children received more antibiotic courses than New Zealand European children, as did children living in areas of high socioeconomic deprivation compared with those in the least deprived areas.
“More than one third of the courses were dispensed during the three winter months and the majority of antibiotic courses were for one antibiotic drug, amoxicillin,” says Dr Hobbs.
“This suggests to us that many of these courses are likely to have been for seasonal respiratory tract infections which are mostly caused by viruses.
“Antibiotic treatment is not effective in these circumstances and is not supported by New Zealand general practice guidelines,” he says.
Antibiotic prescribing decisions for children in general practice often relate to doctors’ perceptions of parents’ expectations when seeking healthcare, as well as parents’ beliefs about antibiotics.
A recent international survey by the World Health Organization revealed a poor level of public understanding about the situations where it is appropriate to use antibiotics.
Recent research has also shown that the first three years of life is a critical period for establishing a healthy microbiome – the healthy communities of bacteria that live in our gut, on our skin and elsewhere. It has been suggested that consumption of antibiotics at a young age may interfere with the developing microbiome and lead to permanent changes in immunity or metabolism.
“There is increasing evidence linking antibiotic use in young children to later weight gain and the development of chronic diseases, with asthma being one example,” says Dr Hobbs.
“Our finding that more than nine out of ten children had been exposed to antibiotics by three years of age is concerning for this reason. The large, ethnically and socioeconomically diverse Growing Up in New Zealand cohort gives us an ideal opportunity to investigate this possibility as the children develop.
“We also intend to review general practice medical records to get a better understanding of the reasons for antibiotic prescribing,” he says.
“Together, we expect these investigations will provide evidence to help manage the challenges of antibiotic use in primary care including addressing parents’ beliefs and expectations and supporting practitioners in balancing benefits versus harms in antibiotic prescribing.”
ENDS
Notes to editors
Hobbs MR, Grant CC, Ritchie SR, Chelimo C, Morton SMB, Berry S, Thomas MG. Antibiotic consumption by New Zealand children: exposure near-universal by the age of five years. Journal of Antimicrobial Chemotherapy published online: doi: 10.1093/jac/dkx060
Results in brief
• 97 percent of the cohort children
had been dispensed one or more courses of antibiotics by the
time they were five years of age.
• 62 percent had been
dispensed antibiotics in the first year of life with 82
percent, 92 percent and 95 percent in the first two, three
and four years respectively.
• A higher proportion of
Māori and Pacific children than European children were
dispensed an antibiotic course during each year of
life.
• Māori and Pacific children were dispensed
their first course of antibiotics at younger ages than other
European or Asian children. Median ages for first courses
were: Pacific 6.9 months, Maori 8.1 months, all others 10.8
months.
• The proportion of children who had been
dispensed a course of antibiotics in each month of life
increased steadily during the first year, peaking in the
twelfth month at one in five children, then declining with
age.
• Marked seasonal variation was superimposed on
the age-related pattern with twice as many courses dispensed
during the winter quarter (June to August) compared to the
summer quarter (December to February).
• Each child was
dispensed a median of eight antibiotic courses by age
five.
• Children of Māori, Pacific, and Asian
ethnicities all received a significantly higher median
number of courses than children of European
ethnicity.
• Antibiotics were dispensed to Māori,
Pacific and Asian children more frequently than to European
children, even when correcting for socioeconomic
deprivation.
• Children living in households of high
economic deprivation were dispensed antibiotics more
frequently than those in low socioeconomic deprivation
areas.
• The dispensing rate was lower for children
living in rural compared with urban areas.
About Growing Up in New
Zealand
• Growing Up in New Zealand is
New Zealand’s contemporary longitudinal study of child
development, tracking the development of nearly 7000
children born in 2009 and 2010 in the context of their
diverse families and environments from before their birth
until they are young adults.
• A key strength of the
study is that the diversity of the child cohort reflects the
ethnic and socioeconomic diversity of today’s primary
school age children. The study has collected detailed
multidisciplinary information about children’s early
development on multiple occasions throughout their preschool
years and will continue to do so every two to three years
until they are adults.
• The unique information
collected within Growing Up in New
Zealand is designed to contribute evidence to
inform
• A better understanding of the causal pathways
that lead to particular developmental outcomes in
contemporary New Zealand, and
• The effective
evaluation, development and implementation of programmes and
policy to optimise: support for families; health and
development of children; and equity of outcomes across and
within the New Zealand population.
• Growing Up in
New Zealand is University of Auckland-led research
funded by the Crown. The Crown funding of the core study and
data collection is managed by the Social Policy and
Evaluation Research Unit (Superu). For further information
visit www.growingup.co.nz