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Primary Care Respiratory Journal: Journal of the General Practice Airways Group logoLink to Primary Care Respiratory Journal: Journal of the General Practice Airways Group
. 2009 Aug 6;19(1):28–34. doi: 10.4104/pcrj.2009.00039

Prescribing of asthma medication in primary care for children aged under 10

Siebrig Schokker 1,*, Feikje Groenhof 1, Willem Jan van der Veen 1, Thys van der Molen 1
PMCID: PMC6827608  PMID: 19662320

Abstract

Objective:

To evaluate prescriptions of asthma medication for children in primary care.

Methods:

Data on prescriptions of asthma medication for children aged 0–9 years were collected from a general practice-based network in the north eastern part of the Netherlands. Prevalence, incidence, indications, continuation beyond the age of 6 years, and predictors of continuation, were determined.

Results:

Prevalence of prescriptions was about 80 per 1000 person years. An asthma diagnosis was registered in 40% of the children with a first prescription and in 70% of the children with six or more prescriptions. Discontinuation of asthma medication was between 60 and 90%. Continuation was more likely in children with a first prescription at age 2 or 3 as compared to children starting treatment at age ≤1 year. Children with prescriptions for β2-agonists and inhaled corticosteroids were more likely to continue treatment than children with β2-agonist monotherapy prescriptions.

Conclusion:

Continuation of asthma medication in children is low. Age at first prescription and the type of asthma medication are predictors of continuation of asthma medication from preschool into school-age.

Keywords: asthma, paediatrics, primary care, medications, prescriptions

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Footnotes

None to declare.


Articles from Primary Care Respiratory Journal: Journal of the General Practice Airways Group are provided here courtesy of Primary Care Respiratory Society UK/Macmillan Publishers Limited

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