Hypnotics use in children 0–18 months: moderate agreement between mother-reported survey data and prescription registry data
Abstract
Background: Different methods in pharmacoepidemiology can be used to study hypnotic use in children. But
neither questionnaire-based data nor prescription records can be considered a “gold standard”. This study
aimed to investigate the agreement between mother-reported questionnaire-based data and prescription
record data for hypnotic drugs in children aged 0–18 months. The agreement was compared to the
agreement for a group of antiepileptic drugs.
Methods: Prescription record data were collected from the Norwegian prescription database for 47,413 children also
surveyed in the Norwegian mother and child cohort between 2005 and 2009. Agreement between in the two data
sources was calculated using Cohens Kappa. Multinomial logistic regression was used to calculate the effect of
sociodemographic variables on discrepancies in data sources.
Results: The agreement between mother-reported and dispensed hypnotics was less than 50% for all hypnotics.
Sensitivity of reporting increased with number of filled prescriptions. The agreement of antiepileptic drugs
was 92.9% in the same population. Of several sociodemographic factors only paternal educational level and
maternal work situation was significantly related to agreement between prescription record and survey data.
Conclusion: There was a moderate agreement between reported use and dispensed hypnotic drugs for
infants and toddlers. Results indicate that sociodemographic factors play only a minor role in explaining
discrepancy.