Prevalence of parental misconceptions about antibiotic use

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Abstract

BACKGROUND: Differences in antibiotic knowledge and attitudes between parents of Medicaid-insured abstract and commercially insured children have been previously reported. It is unknown whether understanding has improved and whether previously identified differences persist. METHODS: A total of 1500 Massachusetts parents with a child ,6 years old insured by a Medicaid managed care or commercial health plan were surveyed in spring 2013.We examined antibiotic-related knowledge and attitudes by using x2 tests. Multivariable modeling was used to assess current sociodemographic predictors of knowledge and evaluate changes in predictors from a similar survey in 2000. RESULTS: Medicaid-insured parents in 2013 (n = 345) were younger, were less likely to be white, and had less education than those commercially insured (n = 353), P , .01. Fewer Medicaid-insured parents answered questions correctly except for one related to bronchitis, for which there was no difference (15% Medicaid vs 16% commercial, P , .66). More parents understood that green nasal discharge did not require antibiotics in 2013 compared with 2000, but this increase was smaller among Medicaid-insured (32% vs 22% P = .02) than commercially insured (49% vs 23%, P , .01) parents. Medicaid-insured parents were more likely to request unnecessary antibiotics in 2013 (P , .01). Multivariable models for predictors of knowledge or attitudes demonstrated complex relationships between insurance status and sociodemographic variables. CONCLUSIONS: Misconceptions about antibiotic use persist and continue to be more prevalent among parents of Medicaid-insured children. Improvement in understanding has been more pronounced in more advantaged populations. Tailored efforts for socioeconomically disadvantaged populations remain warranted to decrease parental drivers of unnecessary antibiotic prescribing.

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Vaz, L. E., Kleinman, K. P., Lakoma, M. D., Dutta-Linn, M. M., Nahill, C., Hellinger, J., & Finkelstein, J. A. (2015). Prevalence of parental misconceptions about antibiotic use. Pediatrics, 136(2), 221–231. https://doi.org/10.1542/peds.2015-0883

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