Non-prescription purchase of antibiotics during travel abroad among a general adult population in Norway: Findings from the seventh Tromsø Study
Permanent lenke
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/17812Dato
2020-02-13Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Forfatter
Gravningen, Kirsten Midttun; Field, Nigel; Blix, Hege Salvesen; Asfeldt, anne mette; Småbrekke, LarsSammendrag
Methods - We analysed questionnaire-data from 19995 participants (10470 women) ≥40 years in the population-based Tromsø Study 7, 2015–2016. Data from the Norwegian Prescription Database were used to examine antibiotic use in Norway. We calculated adjusted odds ratios (AOR) for “travel abroad”, “any antibiotic purchase abroad”, and “antibiotic purchase abroad with” and “without prescription” using multivariable logistic regression.
Results - Over half (55.0%, 95%CI 54.3–55.7%) participants reported travel abroad of >1 week duration in the past year. Travelers were more likely than non-travelers to be women (AOR = 2.02, 95%CI 1.42–2.88%) and report high education/income, childhood mostly lived abroad, healthy lifestyle, and good/excellent self-rated health. In total, 17904 travel episodes to 148 countries were reported. Altogether, 3.7% (95% CI 3.4%-4.1%) of travelers had purchased antibiotic abroad in the past year. Non-prescription purchase (1.5%, 95% CI 1.3–1.7) was associated with younger age, being female (AOR 1.41, 1.0–1.97), number of travels (reference: one episode, two: AOR = 1.82, 1.25–2.67, three: 2.60, 1.58–4.28, four: 3.10, 1.40–6.36 and ≥five: 4.70, 2.30–9.62), occurrences of diarrhoea (one: 2.42, 1.50–3.93 and ≥two: 3.08, 1.29–7.35), and antibiotic use in Norway in the past year (1.84, 1.29–2.62), whereas purchase with prescription (2.4%, 2.1–2.7) was associated with low income, growing-up abroad, recent hospital admission, additionally including number of travels/diarrhoea, and antibiotic use in Norway. Thailand (10.7%, 95% CI 7.8–14.3), Turkey (5.5%, 3.8–7.8) and Spain (3.6%, 3.0–4.3) were the countries most commonly associated with any antibiotic purchase. About two in five travelers who bought antibiotics in Thailand had done so without prescription, three in five in Turkey, and less than one in three in Spain.
Conclusion - Overall, a small proportion of travelers had bought antibiotics abroad in the past year. Low prevalence of non-prescription purchase may be explained by awareness of the risks associated with self-medication, cultural views, unawareness of the non-prescription availability, and/or few infections. Divergent predictors for purchase abroad with versus without prescription may suggest different reasons for these practices.