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2005
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20 Nov 2005
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ANTIMICROBIAL USE
Bartoloni A, Cutts F, Leoni S, Austin CC, Mantella A, Guglielmetti P, Roselli M,
Salazar E, and Paradisi F. Patterns of antimicrobial use and antimicrobial
resistance among healthy children in Bolivia. Tropical Medicine and
International Health 3(2):116-23,
1998.
Abstract: OBJECTIVE: To
determine the incidence of antimicrobial-resistant, nonpathogenic Escherichia
coli among healthy children aged 6-72 months in Camiri town and a rural village,
Javillo, in south-eastern Bolivia. METHOD: A community-based survey: stool
samples were obtained from 296 healthy children selected by modified cluster
sampling in Camiri and all 25 eligible children in Javillo. E. coli isolates
were tested for antimicrobial susceptibility according to the standard disc
diffusion method. By a questionnaire survey of 12 pharmacies and by using
simulated patients, we investigated the antimicrobial availability and the usage
patterns in Camiri town. RESULTS: In Camiri, over 90%, and in Javillo over 70%
of children carried E. coli resistant to ampicillin,
trimethoprim-sulphamethoxazole (TMP/SMX) or tetracycline. Overall, 63% of
children carried E. coli with multiple resistance to ampicillin, TMP/SMX,
tetracycline and chloramphenicol. In the simulated patients study,
antimicrobials were dispensed inappropriately for 92% of adults and 40% of
children with watery diarrhoea, and were under-prescribed for males with
urethral discharge (67%) or females with fever and dysuria (58%). The dose
and/or duration of antimicrobials dispensed was almost always too low.
CONCLUSION: Our study showed a disturbingly high prevalence of carriage of
nonpathogenic E. coli resistant to antimicrobials. The prevalence of resistance
to ampicillin and TMP/SMX was higher than that previously reported in developing
countries. The existence of a large reservoir of resistance genes in healthy
individuals in developing countries represents a threat to the success of
antimicrobial therapy throughout the world. Programmes to improve rational and
effective drug use in developing countries are urgently needed.
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