The practice promotes antibiotic resistance and risks exposing
children to dangerous dosages, expired drugs with harmful products
of degradation and potential allergens, study leader Tamara Kahan of
Northwell Health in Lake Success, New York, told Reuters Health by
email.
"Physicians should emphasize the importance of finishing the entire
course of antibiotics so that there are no leftovers, disposing of
leftover antibiotics when relevant, and the risks of sharing any
type of medication with people for whom it is not prescribed," Kahan
said.
Kahan and colleagues recruited parents nationwide through Amazon
Mechanical Turk, a crowdsourcing online marketplace. Ultimately they
evaluated the responses of 496 parents who met their inclusion
criteria. Participants were 61 percent female and 69 percent white,
with an average age of 34.
Overall, 454 parents, or 92 percent, said they'd had leftover
antibiotics in the house. More than one third of those parents (159,
or 35 percent) said they had redistributed the leftovers to others,
including children and adults. Antibiotic diversion, as the tactic
is called, was more common with drops and liquids than with creams
and pills.
Parents sometimes put other family members on the same dosage
prescribed to the child who received the prescription. Or they
estimated a new dosage according to the age of the family member.
As many as 16 percent of the survey takers said they gave their
children adult medications.
[to top of second column] |
It is unknown precisely how harmful the practice may be, either to
people or through the promotion of antibiotic resistance. Those
questions will be studied in the future, Kahan says.
"The study provides interesting insight into a common problem of
'leftover' antibiotics," said Dr. Jordan Taylor, a pediatric surgeon
at Stanford University School of Medicine in California who was not
involved in the research.
"The researchers found that liquid or solution-based medications are
more frequently stored and diverted; liquid or solution medications
are used almost exclusively in pediatric patients as most cannot
swallow pills. It would appear that more teaching needs to be
provided by the providers or pharmacists on how to handle liquid
medications once the prescription is complete," Dr. Taylor said.
A limitation of the study is the researchers' use of Mechanical Turk
to recruit study participants. Dr. Taylor believes that a study of
people recruited in this manner might not generate findings that
apply to the general public.
Also, Taylor said, "It would have been interesting to ask the
respondents why they kept the medications, or if they had discussed
what to do with extra medication with their provider."
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/2SQD1bx American Academy of Pediatrics,
November 5, 2018.
[© 2018 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2018 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content.
|