Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To study the pattern of drugs prescribing for acute respiratory infections among young children under 5 years and to establish the first step in auditing acute respiratory infections management in two large Primary Health Care Centers in Abha, Asir region.
METHODS: Three hundred and thirteen prescriptions of children less than 5 years old were selected randomly and evaluated for: age, sex, nationality, and drugs prescribed in two large Primary Health Care Centers in Abha city, Asir region, Saudi Arabia. The medical records of children who received antibiotics were further evaluated for: process of recording symptoms and signs and appropriateness with diagnosis. Structures of acute respiratory infections care in both Primary Health Care Centers were evaluated in both centers using checklist and scoring system.
RESULTS: Common cold was the most common diagnosis encountered. Antibiotics were the most common prescribed drugs in both Primary Health Care Centers. Less than one third of files revealed appropriate recording of history and physical examination.
CONCLUSION: There were inadequate structures in both Primary Health Care Centers which negatively affected the process of acute respiratory infections care in both centers. Urgent providing of those structures and establish continuing medical education for the Primary Health Care Center team and health education of the community about acute respiratory infections are two important priorities at both Primary Health Care Centers.
- Copyright: © Saudi Medical Journal
This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike 3.0 Unported, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.