Author/Editor     Kiivet, RA; Biba, V; Enache, D; Foltan, V; Gulbinovic, J; Oltvanyi, N; Oražem, A; Popova, M; Stika, L
Title     Changes in the use of antibacterial drugs in the countries of central and eastern Europe
Type     članek
Source     Eur J Clin Pharmacol
Vol. and No.     Letnik 48, št. 3-4
Publication year     1995
Volume     str. 299-304
Language     eng
Abstract     Use of systemic antibacterial drugs in the countries of central and eastern Europe (CCEE) has been studied using the defined daily doses (DDD) methodology. For the comparison, national wholesale data from Bulgaria, the Czech Republic, Estonia, Hungary, Lithuania, Slovakia, Slovenia and Romania for the years 1989 and 1992 were used, i.e. for the years before and after the rapid sociopolitical changes in these countries. Substantial differences in the patterns of antibacterial drug use between countries as geographically and economically similar as the CCEE were observed. The general sales of antibiotics varied almost twofold among the CCEE and had decreased in most of the CCEE during the study period. The proportion of tetracyclines in the sales of 1992 ranged from 10 percent in Slovenia to 49 percent in Estonia, and that of broad-spectrum penicillins from 6 percent in Estonia to 40 percent in Slovenia. The use of narrow-spectrum penicillins varied within the range of 4 percent in Bulgaria to 38 percent in Slovakia, and had decreased during the study years in all countries. Aminoglycosides accounted for 5-12 percent of all antibacterials in Bulgaria, Estonia, Lithuania, Romania and Slovakia in the study period, and these countries, with the exception of Slovakia, also had a high consumption of chloramphenicol. In 1992, by far the most popular antiinfectives in the CCEE were doxycycline, ampicillin and co-trimoxazole, which ranked among the top ten drugs in all countries studied.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Descriptors     ANTIBIOTICS
DRUG UTILIZATION
AMPICILLIN
EPIDEMIOLOGY
EUROPE
PENICILLINS
TETRACYCLINES