The number of patients given antibiotics for coughs and colds has soared 40% despite warnings, a study finds.
GPs are still giving out antibiotics to treat coughs and colds, the Mail Online, The Daily Telegraph and BBC News report, as a study reveals efforts to curb antibiotic use has had "mixed success".
The study found the proportion of people with coughs and colds given antibiotics rose from 36% in 1999 to 51% in 2011: an increase of around 40%.
The rise comes amid warnings that the over-prescription of antibiotics could lead to the emergence of drug-resistant bacteria.
Antibiotics are medications used to treat, and in some cases prevent, bacterial infections. They are ineffective at treating coughs and colds, which are usually viral infections.
Researchers from Public Health England (PHE) and University College London (UCL) looked at trends in the prescription of antibiotics in more than 500 UK GP surgeries between 1995 and 2011.
They focused on coughs and colds, sore throats, urinary tract infections (UTIs) and middle ear infections (otitis media), which are all subject to specific government recommendations to help curb antibiotic use.
Antibiotic use for sore throats fell between 1995 and 2011, although it was still high considering that approximately 90% of sore throats resolve without antibiotics. The recommended antibiotic for acute sore throat was given in the majority of cases.
The proportion of women prescribed antibiotics for UTIs who were prescribed the recommended short course increased, although there was variation between GP practices.
For middle ear infections, the proportion of cases that were prescribed an antibiotic was broadly unchanged over the study period, but the proportion of people who were prescribed the recommended antibiotic increased.
"The implementation of national guidelines in UK primary care has had mixed success," conclude the study's authors.
Prescriptions of antibiotics for coughs and colds are now "greater than before recommendations were made to reduce it".
The study also found significant variation in antibiotic use for these conditions between GP practices, suggesting that further improvements in antibiotic prescriptions could be made.
The study was carried out by researchers from PHE, the Royal College of General Practitioners Research and Surveillance Centre, and UCL.
It was funded by the Health Protection Agency (HPA) and published in the peer-reviewed Journal of Antimicrobial Chemotherapy.
Generally, the media reporting of this story was accurate.
This was a cross-sectional study that analysed trends in antibiotic prescription at 537 GP practices in the UK between 1995 and 2011.
The aim of this study was to examine and compare antibiotic use over time and see whether it was in line with recommendations.
Antibiotic prescription in line with recommendations is one of the strategies being implemented to try to limit resistance to antibiotics.
Researchers analysed antibiotic use in 537 UK GP practices over a 16-year period.
They looked at antibiotic use, the type of antibiotic used, and the length of treatment for:
These conditions are subject to recommendations made in 1998 by the UK Department of Health's Standing Medical Advisory Committee (SMAC) that clinicians should:
This advice has been supplemented with further professional guidance on antibiotic use from the UK Public Health Laboratory Service in 2000, which recommends that:
The researchers looked at changes over time, as well as variation in antibiotic prescription between practices.
Coughs and colds
The proportion of cases of coughs and colds where antibiotics were used decreased from 47% in 1995 to 36% in 1999, before increasing to 51% in 2011.
There was marked variation by primary care practice in 2011, with 10% of practices prescribing antibiotics for less than 32% of cases and 10% of practices prescribing antibiotics for more than 65% of cases.
*Sore throats
*Antibiotic prescribing for sore throats fell from 77% in 1995 to 62% in 1999, and then stayed broadly stable.
Again, there was variation by primary care practice seen in 2011, with 10% of practices prescribing antibiotics for less than 45% of cases, and 10% of practices prescribing antibiotics for more than 78% of cases.
Where antibiotics were prescribed for a sore throat, the appropriate type of antibiotic was used in 69% of cases in 2011, representing a slight increase from 64% in 1995.
Urinary tract infections in women
Trimethoprim or nitrofurantoin are the recommended antibiotics for UTIs, which includes conditions such as cystitis.
The proportion of women aged 16-74 years with a UTI who were prescribed trimethoprim fell from 62% in 1995 to 54% in 2011, and the proportion who were prescribed nitrofurantoin rose from 5% in 1995 to 24% in 2011.
The researchers calculated the length of antibiotic dose from the amount of antibiotic prescribed. When trimethoprim was prescribed, the use of a recommended short course rose from 8% in 1995 to 50% in 2011. When nitrofurantoin was prescribed, the use of a recommended short course rose from 6% in 1995 to 20% in 2011.
Again, there was variation between practices, with a quarter of practices prescribing short courses in fewer than 16% of episodes that were prescribed trimethoprim in 2011.
Otitis media
The proportion of otitis media cases that were prescribed an antibiotic was broadly unchanged over the study period.
Again, there was variation between practices, with 10% of practices prescribing antibiotics for less than 63% of cases and 10% of practices prescribing antibiotics for more than 97% of cases.
Where antibiotics were prescribed, prescriptions for recommended antibiotics rose from 77% in 1995 to 85% in 2011.
The researchers conclude that, "The implementation of national guidelines in UK primary care has had mixed success, with prescribing for coughs/colds, both in total and as a proportion of consultations, now being greater than before recommendations were made to reduce it. Extensive variation by practice suggests that there is significant scope to improve prescribing, particularly for coughs/colds and for UTIs."
This cross-sectional study has found the proportion of people with coughs and colds that are prescribed antibiotics rose from 36% in 1999 to 51% in 2011 – an increase of approximately 40%. This is despite the publication of guidance recommending that GPs do not prescribe antibiotics for coughs and colds.
It also found substantial variation between different GP practices, with 10% of practices prescribing antibiotics for less than 32% of cases and 10% of practices prescribing antibiotics for more than 65% of cases, suggesting that substantially lower rates of prescribing could be achieved.
The study also looked at antibiotic prescription for sore throats, UTIs and otitis media. Antibiotic prescription for sore throats fell, and prescription of recommended antibiotics increased.
Over the study period, more women with UTIs were prescribed the recommended short course of antibiotics. For otitis media, the proportion of cases that were prescribed an antibiotic was broadly unchanged, and prescriptions for recommended antibiotics rose.
There was variation between GP practices in antibiotic prescription for these conditions, suggesting that further improvements in antibiotic prescription could be made.
In conclusion, this study suggests there is a need to improve the way antibiotics are prescribed.