RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 Chronic diseases and compliance with provincial guidelines for outpatient antibiotic prescription in cases of otitis media and respiratory infections: a population-based study of linked data in Quebec, Canada, 2010–2017 JF CMAJ Open JO CMAJ FD Canadian Medical Association SP E841 OP E847 DO 10.9778/cmajo.20210257 VO 10 IS 3 A1 Fortin, Élise A1 Deceuninck, Geneviève A1 Sirois, Caroline A1 Quach, Caroline A1 Simard, Marc A1 Dionne, Marc A1 Jean, Sonia A1 Irace-Cima, Alejandra A1 Magali-Ufitinema, Nadine YR 2022 UL http://www.cmajopen.ca/content/10/3/E841.abstract AB Background: In Quebec, antibiotic use is higher among outpatients with chronic diseases. We sought to measure compliance with provincial guidelines for the treatment of otitis media and common respiratory infections, and to measure variations in compliance according to the presence of certain chronic diseases.Methods: We conducted a population-based study of linked data on antibiotic dispensing covered by the public drug insurance plan between April 2010 and March 2017. We included patients who had consulted a primary care physician within 2 days before being dispensed an antibiotic for an infection targeted by provincial guidelines, including bronchitis in patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, otitis media, pharyngitis, pneumonia and sinusitis. We computed proportions of prescriptions compliant with guidelines (use of recommended antibiotic for children, and use of recommended antibiotic and dosage for adults) by age group (children or adults) and chronic disease (respiratory, cardiovascular, diabetes, mental disorder or none). We measured the impact of chronic diseases on compliance using robust Poisson regression.Results: We analyzed between 14 677 and 198 902 prescriptions for each infection under study. Compliance was greater than 87% among children, but was lower among children with asthma (proportion ratios between 0.97 and 1.00). In adults, the chosen antibiotic was compliant for at least 73% of prescriptions, except for pharyngitis (≤ 61%). Accounting for dosage lowered compliance to between 31% and 61%. Compliance was lower in the presence of chronic diseases (proportion ratios between 0.94 and 0.98).Interpretation: It is possible that prescribing noncompliant prescriptions was sometimes appropriate, but the high frequency of noncompliance suggests room for improvement. Given that variations associated with chronic diseases were small, disease-specific guidelines for antibiotic prescriptions are likely to have a limited impact on compliance.See related research article by Fortin and colleagues at www.cmajopen.ca/lookup/doi/10.9778/cmajo.20210258