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Table 1 Percentage of doctors prescribing antimicrobials for the URTIs.

From: Physician behaviour for antimicrobial prescribing for paediatric upper respiratory tract infections: a survey in general practice in Trinidad, West Indies

Antimicrobial

Pharyngitis (n = 81)

Tonsillitis (n = 89)

Common cold (n = 21)

Sinusitis (n = 87)

Otitis media (n = 91)

Penicillins

70 (86.4)

78 (87.6)

19 (90.0)

61 (70.1)

70 (76.9)

Ampicillin, amoxicillin

57 (70.3)

58 (65.2)

17 (80.0)

25 (28.7)

30 (33.0)

Co-amoxiclav

37 (45.7)

51 (57.3)

4 (20.0)

32 (52.9)

55 (60.4)

Macrolides

48 (59.3)

53 (59.6)

7 (35.0)

46 (52.9)

50 (54.9)

Erythromycin & derivatives

46 (56.7)

45 (50.5)

6 (30.0)

36 (41.3)

35 (38.5)

Azithromycin

22 (27.2)

27 (30.3)

2 (10.0)

22 (25.3)

27 (29.7)

Cephalosporins

37 (45.7)

44 (49.4)

6 (30.0)

38 (43.7)

43 (47.3)

1 st generation

9 (11.1)

13 (14.6)

2 (10.0)

6 (6.9)

8 (8.8)

2 nd generation

33 (40.7)

37 (41.6)

4 (20.0)

40 (46.0)

43 (47.3)

Other

14 (17.3)

11 (12.4)

4 (20.0)

28 (32.2)

13 (14.3)

Quinolones

8 (9.9)

8 (9.0)

3 (14.3)

12 (13.8)

7 (7.7)

Tetracyclines

1 (1.2)

0 (0.0)

1 (4.8)

13 (14.9)

0 (0.0)

  1. * Doctors prescribed more than one antimicrobial for each URTI