Impact of COVID-19 pandemic on the utilization and quality of antibiotic use in the primary care setting in England, March 2019–March 2023: a segmented interrupted time series analysis of over 53 million individuals

Amanj Kurdi*, Najla Al Mutairi, Kirmanj Baker, Karwan M-Amen, Omeed Darweesh, Hardee Karwi, Andrew Seaton, Jacqueline Sneddon, Brian Godman

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

2 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Background: Amid the COVID-19 pandemic, we evaluated the short-term impact of COVID-19 on antibiotic use in primary care in England, focusing on both antibiotic quantity (overuse) and quality (misuse) of use. Research design and methods: A population-based segmented interrupted analysis was applied on monthly dispensed antibiotics prescriptions using the Prescription Cost Analysis dataset (March/2019–March/2023). The quantity was assessed using number of items dispensed per 1000 inhabitants (NTI) and defined daily doses per 1000 inhabitants per day (DID), while quality was evaluated using WHO’s Access Watch Reserve (AWaRe) classification, the proportion of ‘4C’ antibiotics and the percentage of broad- to narrow-spectrum antibiotics. Results: Findings indicate 8.6 (17.2%) and 0.4 (2.6%) increase in the NTI and DID, respectively, with a statistically significant uptick in trend noted after the second lockdown (β5) for ‘total antibiotics’ for NTI only (β5 = 1.6; 95% CI:0.17, 3.1). Quality assessment showed an increase in ‘Access’ antibiotics from 77% in March/2019 to 86% in March/2023; however, COVID-19 had no significant impact on WHO AWaRe classes. Conclusion: COVID-19’s impact on antibiotic use quality and quantity appeared to be minimal, though an increase in utilization post-second lockdown coincided with healthcare system recovery. This suggests a nuanced impact of the pandemic, highlighting the importance of continued antimicrobial stewardship.

Original languageEnglish
JournalExpert Review of Anti-Infective Therapy
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2024

Keywords

  • Antimicrobial resistance (AMR)
  • COVID-19
  • England
  • antibiotics
  • antimicrobial stewardship
  • primary care
  • segmented interrupted analysis

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