Antibiotic prescribing among elderly living in long-term care facilities versus elderly living at home: a Danish registry-based study

INFECTIOUS DISEASES(2022)

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Background The objective of this study was to compare antibiotic prescription rates in Denmark among elderly living in long-term care facilities to elderly living at home, with regards to total antibiotic use and antibiotic use for urinary tract infection. Methods This is an observational registry-based study. The study population included all elderly Danish residents aged >= 75 years in 2016. Linear regression models were used to examine the difference in antibiotic prescription rates between elderly living in long-term care facilities and elderly living at home. Results were adjusted for age, sex and comorbidity, the latter assessed via the Charlson Comorbidity Index. Results The study population consisted of 416,627 elderly. Regression models showed that elderly living in long-term care facilities were prescribed 1.7 [CI 1.7-1.7] prescriptions/individual/year more than elderly living at home. For urinary tract infections the difference between elderly living in long-term care facilities and elderly living at home was 1.2 [CI 1.2-1.3] prescriptions/individual/year. Conclusions Elderly living in long-term care facilities have a higher antibiotic prescribing rate than elderly living at home, despite controlling for age, sex and comorbidity. This indicates that long-term care facilities continuously should be a focus for antibiotic stewardship interventions.
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Antibiotic prescription, urinary tract infection, elderly, long-term care facilities, community-dwelling
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