Prescribing practices of corticosteroids in outpatient dermatology department of Injibara General Hospital, north-West Ethiopia, 2024

BackgroundCorticosteroids are among the most frequently prescribed drugs in the world because they are extremely effective for the relief of symptoms of many inflammatory and immune disorders and other conditions. Corticosteroids have been a mainstay of pharmacotherapy in dermatological practice.Obj...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Alemu Bezabih Tegegnie, Tamiru Alene, Workineh Tamir, Meaza Molla Sineshaw
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2025-01-01
Series:Frontiers in Medicine
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fmed.2024.1496784/full
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1841561198310457344
author Alemu Bezabih Tegegnie
Tamiru Alene
Workineh Tamir
Meaza Molla Sineshaw
author_facet Alemu Bezabih Tegegnie
Tamiru Alene
Workineh Tamir
Meaza Molla Sineshaw
author_sort Alemu Bezabih Tegegnie
collection DOAJ
description BackgroundCorticosteroids are among the most frequently prescribed drugs in the world because they are extremely effective for the relief of symptoms of many inflammatory and immune disorders and other conditions. Corticosteroids have been a mainstay of pharmacotherapy in dermatological practice.ObjectiveThis study aimed to assess prescribing practices of corticosteroids in outpatient dermatology department of Injibara General Hospital, North-West Ethiopia, 2024.MethodA facility-based retrospective cross-sectional study was conducted from September 1 to September 10, 2024, with 422 patient prescriptions issued at the dermatology outpatient department of Injibara General Hospital containing at least one corticosteroid medicine. All patient prescriptions dispensed from the dermatology outpatient department from April to August 2024 containing at least one corticosteroid medicine were included. A structured data collection tool was used to collect data, and Statistical Package for Social Science version 27.1 was used for data analysis. The study population was characterized through descriptive analysis.ResultsFemale patients accounted 54.2% of the cases recorded, and the most common age group was between 21 and 30 years (26.5%). Atopic dermatitis (15.4%) was the most common skin disorder, followed by papular urticaria (9.97%) and seborrheic dermatitis (8.9%) for which corticosteroids were prescribed. Topical corticosteroids were the most commonly prescribed medications, accounting for 94.1%. The percentage of corticosteroids prescribed by generic name was 82.4%. We found that the percentage of topical corticosteroid prescriptions in fixed drug combinations and extemporaneous prescription was 4.4 and 1.2%, respectively. Mometasone furoate was the most commonly prescribed (34.6%), followed by clobetasol propionate (26.7%). Ointments (53%) followed by creams (40.6%) were the most common formulations of topical corticosteroids issued. In the present study, moderate potency TCS were most commonly prescribed (32.3%), followed by high potency (28.3%), and super high potency (27.6%), respectively.ConclusionFrom this study, it can be concluded that atopic dermatitis is the most common skin disease observed in the studied dermatology outpatient where the corticosteroid was indicated. Mometasone furoate and clobetasol propionate were the two most commonly prescribed agents. Prescribing practice of high potent and very high potent topical corticosteroids was found to be considerably high.
format Article
id doaj-art-8e304f13229240349e20ab917a8451a6
institution Kabale University
issn 2296-858X
language English
publishDate 2025-01-01
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
record_format Article
series Frontiers in Medicine
spelling doaj-art-8e304f13229240349e20ab917a8451a62025-01-03T05:10:22ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Medicine2296-858X2025-01-011110.3389/fmed.2024.14967841496784Prescribing practices of corticosteroids in outpatient dermatology department of Injibara General Hospital, north-West Ethiopia, 2024Alemu Bezabih Tegegnie0Tamiru Alene1Workineh Tamir2Meaza Molla Sineshaw3Department of Dermatovenereology, College of Medicine and Health Sciences, Injibara University, Injibara, EthiopiaDepartment of Pediatrics and Child Health Nursing, College of Medicine and Health Sciences, Injibara University, Injibara, EthiopiaDepartment of Medical Laboratory Science, College of Medicine and Health Sciences, Injibara University, Injibara, EthiopiaPublic Health Officer, Ethiopian Statistical Service, Bahirdar, EthiopiaBackgroundCorticosteroids are among the most frequently prescribed drugs in the world because they are extremely effective for the relief of symptoms of many inflammatory and immune disorders and other conditions. Corticosteroids have been a mainstay of pharmacotherapy in dermatological practice.ObjectiveThis study aimed to assess prescribing practices of corticosteroids in outpatient dermatology department of Injibara General Hospital, North-West Ethiopia, 2024.MethodA facility-based retrospective cross-sectional study was conducted from September 1 to September 10, 2024, with 422 patient prescriptions issued at the dermatology outpatient department of Injibara General Hospital containing at least one corticosteroid medicine. All patient prescriptions dispensed from the dermatology outpatient department from April to August 2024 containing at least one corticosteroid medicine were included. A structured data collection tool was used to collect data, and Statistical Package for Social Science version 27.1 was used for data analysis. The study population was characterized through descriptive analysis.ResultsFemale patients accounted 54.2% of the cases recorded, and the most common age group was between 21 and 30 years (26.5%). Atopic dermatitis (15.4%) was the most common skin disorder, followed by papular urticaria (9.97%) and seborrheic dermatitis (8.9%) for which corticosteroids were prescribed. Topical corticosteroids were the most commonly prescribed medications, accounting for 94.1%. The percentage of corticosteroids prescribed by generic name was 82.4%. We found that the percentage of topical corticosteroid prescriptions in fixed drug combinations and extemporaneous prescription was 4.4 and 1.2%, respectively. Mometasone furoate was the most commonly prescribed (34.6%), followed by clobetasol propionate (26.7%). Ointments (53%) followed by creams (40.6%) were the most common formulations of topical corticosteroids issued. In the present study, moderate potency TCS were most commonly prescribed (32.3%), followed by high potency (28.3%), and super high potency (27.6%), respectively.ConclusionFrom this study, it can be concluded that atopic dermatitis is the most common skin disease observed in the studied dermatology outpatient where the corticosteroid was indicated. Mometasone furoate and clobetasol propionate were the two most commonly prescribed agents. Prescribing practice of high potent and very high potent topical corticosteroids was found to be considerably high.https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fmed.2024.1496784/fullcorticosteroidsprescribing practicedermatologyInjibaraEthiopia
spellingShingle Alemu Bezabih Tegegnie
Tamiru Alene
Workineh Tamir
Meaza Molla Sineshaw
Prescribing practices of corticosteroids in outpatient dermatology department of Injibara General Hospital, north-West Ethiopia, 2024
Frontiers in Medicine
corticosteroids
prescribing practice
dermatology
Injibara
Ethiopia
title Prescribing practices of corticosteroids in outpatient dermatology department of Injibara General Hospital, north-West Ethiopia, 2024
title_full Prescribing practices of corticosteroids in outpatient dermatology department of Injibara General Hospital, north-West Ethiopia, 2024
title_fullStr Prescribing practices of corticosteroids in outpatient dermatology department of Injibara General Hospital, north-West Ethiopia, 2024
title_full_unstemmed Prescribing practices of corticosteroids in outpatient dermatology department of Injibara General Hospital, north-West Ethiopia, 2024
title_short Prescribing practices of corticosteroids in outpatient dermatology department of Injibara General Hospital, north-West Ethiopia, 2024
title_sort prescribing practices of corticosteroids in outpatient dermatology department of injibara general hospital north west ethiopia 2024
topic corticosteroids
prescribing practice
dermatology
Injibara
Ethiopia
url https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fmed.2024.1496784/full
work_keys_str_mv AT alemubezabihtegegnie prescribingpracticesofcorticosteroidsinoutpatientdermatologydepartmentofinjibarageneralhospitalnorthwestethiopia2024
AT tamirualene prescribingpracticesofcorticosteroidsinoutpatientdermatologydepartmentofinjibarageneralhospitalnorthwestethiopia2024
AT workinehtamir prescribingpracticesofcorticosteroidsinoutpatientdermatologydepartmentofinjibarageneralhospitalnorthwestethiopia2024
AT meazamollasineshaw prescribingpracticesofcorticosteroidsinoutpatientdermatologydepartmentofinjibarageneralhospitalnorthwestethiopia2024