Recommendations against use of cough and cold medicines in young
children have become increasingly common since 2008, when the U.S.
Food and Drug Administration advised against giving over-the-counter
cough and cold dugs to kids under age 2. Soon after, drugmakers
advised against cough and cold drugs for kids under age 4 and the
American Academy of Pediatrics recommended against these drugs for
kids under age 6.
To see how these recommendations have impacted doctors' prescribing
habits, researchers examined data representing 3.1 billion pediatric
visits over 14 years, from 2002 to 2015.
They looked at prescribing of cough and cold drugs with and without
opioids as well as antihistamines.
Compared with 2002 to 2008 - the period before recommendations
against use - in 2009 to 2015 prescriptions for non-opioid cough and
cold medicines dropped 70% for kids under 2 years old, the study
found. And recommendations for cough and cold drugs with opioids
dropped by 90% among kids under 6 years old.
"Our study suggests that doctors responded to professional warnings
against the use of cough and cold medicines in young children," said
lead study author Dr. Daniel Horton, a researcher at the Rutgers
Robert Wood Johnson Medical School in New Brunswick, New Jersey.
Antihistamine recommendations for young children surged, however,
rising more than 10-fold for kids under 4 years old and more than
5-fold for children 4 to 5 years old.
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"Given that many parents want some treatment, one might guess that
some doctors started recommending antihistamines more often as a
safer alternative to other cough and cold (medicines), even though
there is little evidence that they actually work to treat colds in
children," Horton said by email.
Changes in recommendations for cough and cold medicines for children
over 2 years old were too small to rule out the possibility that
they were due to chance, as were shifts in recommendations for
antihistamines in kids 4 to 5 years old and teenagers.
One limitation of the study is that researchers lacked data on
whether parents followed recommendations to take or avoid specific
medicines, or whether parents might have given kids over the counter
drugs that weren't recommended by doctors, researchers note in JAMA
Pediatrics.
Generally, colds in children do not need to be treated with
medications, and children will get better on their own, Horton said.
"They can be managed at home with fluids, rest, medicines for fever
or pain such as acetaminophen or ibuprofen, honey for cough (safe
only for children over 1), and tincture of time," Horton advised.
"Children should see their doctors if they are not able to keep up
with fluids, appear dehydrated or lethargic, have difficulty
breathing, have fevers that persist for several days, or if there
are other concerns."
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/316CDbR JAMA Pediatrics, online July 29, 2019.
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