Antibiotic prescribing in women during and after delivery in a non-teaching, tertiary care hospital in Ujjain, India: a prospective cross-sectional study
Abstract
Objectives: Antibacterial drugs (hereafter referred to as antibiotics) are crucial to treat infections during delivery
and postpartum period to reduce maternal mortality. Institutional deliveries have the potential to save lives of many
women but extensive use of antibiotics, add to the development and spread of antibiotic resistance. The aim of this
study was to present antibiotic prescribing among inpatients during and after delivery in a non-teaching, tertiary care
hospital in the city of Ujjain, Madhya Pradesh, India.
Methods: A prospective cross-sectional study was conducted including women having had either a vaginal delivery or
a cesarean section in the hospital. Trained nursing staff collected the data on daily bases, using a specific form attached
to each patient file. Statistical analysis, including bivariate and multivariable logistic regression was conducted.
Results: Of the total 1077 women, 566 (53%) had a vaginal delivery and 511 (47%) had a cesarean section.
Eighty-seven percent of the women that had a vaginal delivery and 98% of the women having a cesarean section
were prescribed antibiotics. The mean number of days on antibiotics in hospital for the women with a vaginal delivery
was 3.1 (±1.7) and for the women with cesarean section was 6.0 (±2.5). Twenty-eight percent of both the women with
vaginal deliveries and the women with cesarean sections were prescribed antibiotics at discharge. The most commonly
prescribed antibiotic group in the hospital for both the women that had a vaginal delivery and the women that had a
cesarean section were third-generation cephalosporins (J01DD). The total number of defined daily doses (DDD) per100
bed days for women that had a vaginal delivery was 101, and 127 for women that had a cesarean section.
Conclusions: The high percentage of women having had a vaginal delivery that received antibiotics and the deviation
from recommendation for cesarean section in the hospital is a cause of concern. Improved maternal health and
rational use of antibiotics are intertwined. Specific policy and guidelines on how to prescribe antibiotics during delivery
at health care facilities are needed. Additionally, monitoring system of antibiotic prescribing and resistance needs to be
developed and implemented.