Health Equity and Antibiotic Prescribing in the United States: A Systematic Scoping Review

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Abstract

We performed a scoping review of articles published from 1 January 2000 to 4 January 2022 to characterize inequities in antibiotic prescribing and use across healthcare settings in the United States to inform antibiotic stewardship interventions and research. We included 34 observational studies, 21 cross-sectional survey studies, 4 intervention studies, and 2 systematic reviews. Most studies (55 of 61 [90%]) described the outpatient setting, 3 articles were from dentistry, 2 were from long-term care, and 1 was from acute care. Differences in antibiotic prescribing were found by patient's race and ethnicity, sex, age, socioeconomic factors, geography, clinician's age and specialty, and healthcare setting, with an emphasis on outpatient settings. Few studies assessed stewardship interventions. Clinicians, antibiotic stewardship experts, and health systems should be aware that prescribing behavior varies according to both clinician- and patient-level markers. Prescribing differences likely represent structural inequities; however, no studies reported underlying drivers of inequities in antibiotic prescribing.

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APA

Kim, C., Kabbani, S., Dube, W. C., Neuhauser, M., Tsay, S., Hersh, A., … Hicks, L. A. (2023, September 1). Health Equity and Antibiotic Prescribing in the United States: A Systematic Scoping Review. Open Forum Infectious Diseases. Oxford University Press. https://doi.org/10.1093/ofid/ofad440

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