Antibiotic use among patients admitted to tertiary hospitals in Uganda: a trend analysis of 2020–2023 point prevalence surveys
Suzan Nakasendwa, Jonathan Mayito, Vivian Twemanye, Conrad Tumwine, Reuben Kiggundu, Ronald Galiwango, Elly Nuwamanya, James Muleme, Flavia Dhikusooka, Herman Mwanja, Ellon Twinomuhwezi, Harriet Akello, Morries Seru, Hope Mackline, Dathan M Byonanebye, Francis Kakooza

TL;DR
This study analyzed antibiotic use in Ugandan hospitals from 2020 to 2023, finding high prescription rates with some improvements in guideline adherence and reduced use of certain antibiotics.
Contribution
The study provides the first detailed trend analysis of antibiotic use in Ugandan tertiary hospitals over a four-year period.
Findings
Antibiotic prescriptions remained high, with no significant change in overall prescription rates over time.
Adherence to treatment guidelines and use of culture and sensitivity tests increased significantly.
Prescriptions of 'Watch' antibiotics decreased, while adherence to national guidelines improved.
Abstract
Limited data exist on temporal changes in antibiotic use in low and middle-income countries. We evaluated trends in antibiotic use at tertiary hospitals in Uganda. Retrospective trend analysis of a repeated point prevalence survey (PPS). This study utilised antibiotic use data from quarterly PPS conducted among inpatients at nine regional referral hospitals in Uganda between October 2020 and December 2023. We determined the proportions of antibiotic use, prescriptions guided by culture and sensitivity tests (CST), WHO AWaRe (Access, Watch and Reserve) categories, and prescriptions without documented indication. Linear regression was used to derive slope coefficients and 95% confidence interval (CI). Of 15,154 patients surveyed, 8,892 (58.7%) received systemic antibiotics. The median age was 23 years (IQR: 11–38), 5,338 (60.5%) were female, and 4,583 (51.5%) were on treatment for…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAntibiotic Use and Resistance · Antibiotic Resistance in Bacteria · Global Maternal and Child Health
