Association of area-level education with the regional growth trajectories of rates of antibacterial dispensing to patients under 3 years in Norway: a longitudinal retrospective study
Permanent link
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/27492Date
2022-09-08Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Abstract
Design Retrospective, longitudinal study using individual primary care prescription data from the Norwegian Prescription Database for the period 2006–2016. Data were collected on the date of dispensing, the type and amount of antibiotic, the patient’s age, sex and municipality of residence and linked to municipality-level statistics on education available from Statistics Norway. We used multilevel growth curve modelling, with a linear trend variable modelled as a random effect and a cross-level interaction between linear trends and the proportion of the population in the municipality having received a university or college education.
Setting The local government level in Norway. The sample includes all municipalities over the study period.
Outcome measure Number of dispensed antibacterial prescriptions per 100 children in individual primary care by municipality and year.
Results We identified a significant negative linear trend in the square root of the dispensing rate for children under 3 years old during the period. This trend varied between municipalities. A negative cross-level interaction term between population education levels and random trends showed that municipalities with an average level of population education saw a reduction in their square root dispensing rates of −0.053 (95% CI −0.066 to −0.039) prescriptions per 100 children. Each additional percentage point in population education contributed a further −0.0034 (95% CI −0.006 to –0.001) reduction to the square root dispensing rate.
Conclusions Municipalities in which a larger proportion of the local population have high educational achievements have been more successful in reducing antibacterial dispensing rates in children under 3 years old. Adopting area-level strategies and addressing local community disadvantages may help to optimise practices and prescribing patterns across local communities.