Abstract

Global assessments of antibiotic consumption have relied on pharmaceutical sales data that do not measure individual-level use, and are often unreliable or unavailable for low-income and middle-income countries (LMICs). To help fill this evidence gap, we compiled data from national surveys in LMICs in 2005-17 reporting antibiotic use for sick children under the age of 5 years. Based on 132 Demographic and Health Surveys and Multiple Indicator Cluster Surveys from 73 LMICs, we analysed trends in reported antibiotic use among children under 5 years of age with fever, diarrhoea, or cough with fast or difficult breathing by WHO region, World Bank income classification, and symptom complaint. A logit transformation was used to estimate the outcome using a linear Bayesian regression model. The model included country-level socioeconomic, disease incidence, and health system covariates to generate estimates for country-years with missing values. Across LMICs, reported antibiotic use among sick children under 5 years of age increased from 36·8% (uncertainty interval [UI] 28·8-44·7) in 2005 to 43·1% (33·2-50·5) in 2017. Low-income countries had the greatest relative increase; in these countries, reported antibiotic use for sick children under 5 years of age rose 34% during the study period, from 29·6% (21·2-41·1) in 2005 to 39·5% (32·9-47·6) in 2017, although it remained the lowest of any income group throughout the study period. We found a limited but steady increase in reported antibiotic use for sick children under 5 years of age across LMICs in 2005-17, although overlapping UIs complicate interpretation. The increase was largely driven by gains in low-income countries. Our study expands the evidence base from LMICs, where strengthening antibiotic consumption and resistance surveillance is a global health priority. Uppsala Antibiotic Centre, Uppsala University, Uppsala University Hospital, Makerere University, Gothenburg University.

Highlights

  • Antimicrobial resistance is a leading global health challenge that threatens our ability to treat common infections and to do a wide range of medical procedures often associated with infectious complications

  • Across low-income and middle-income countries (LMICs), reported antibiotic use among sick children under 5 years of age increased from 36·8% in 2005 to 43·1% (33·2–50·5) in 2017

  • Interpretation We found a limited but steady increase in reported antibiotic use for sick children under 5 years of age across LMICs in 2005–17, overlapping Uncertainty intervals (UIs) complicate interpretation

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Summary

Introduction

Antimicrobial resistance is a leading global health challenge that threatens our ability to treat common infections and to do a wide range of medical procedures often associated with infectious complications. The direct and indirect effects of antimicrobial resistance will mostly be felt in low-income and middle-income countries (LMICs), because of their higher burden of infectious diseases and weaker health systems that are not adequately equipped to care for patients with drugresistant infections.[1]. For some of these same reasons, quantifying antibiotic use in resource-poor settings is challenging, and the lack of reliable data on global antibiotic consumption from LMICs persists.[3]

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