PEDIATRICS Vol. 108 No. 2 August 2001, p. e25
Received Jan 26, 2001; accepted Apr 2, 2001.
, and
From the * Groningen Institute for Drug Exploration (GUIDE),
University of Groningen, University Centre for Pharmacy, Section of
Social Pharmacy and Pharmacoepidemiology, Groningen, The Netherlands;
Objective. Although there is a global
concern about the increased use of psychotropic agents in children,
most research literature originates in the United States and is based
on figures from the first half of the 1990s. Also, few studies document
the use of various types of psychotropic agents. The objective of this
study was to investigate the use of psychotropic medication in children
in the Netherlands and to determine whether this corresponds with
previously reported figures from the United States.
Methods. A drug utilization study based on computerized
pharmacy dispensing records was conducted from 1995 to 1999 for
children aged 0 to 19 years in the north of the Netherlands.
Results. Stimulants were the most widely used psychotropic
agents among 0- to 19-year-olds (prevalence: 7.4/1000 in 1999),
followed by hypnotics/anxiolytics (6.9/1000) and antidepressants
(4.4/1000). Prevalence rates of stimulants increased from 1.5/1000 in
1995 to 7.4/1000 in 1999. Incidence rates, proportion of girls, and duration of stimulant treatment increased as well. Changes in prevalence rates of other psychotropic agents were much smaller than
those of stimulants. Finally, the vast majority of children who were
treated with psychotropic agents used only 1 agent at a time.
Conclusion. The prevalence of stimulant use in the
Netherlands is much lower than reported previously (28/1000 children in
1995) from the United States, and differences also existed with regard
to the use of other psychotropic agents and combinations of
psychotropic agents. However, the increase in Dutch stimulant use
agrees with the previously reported 2.5-fold increase in the United
States and shows that the increased use of stimulants is not limited to
the United States.
University of Maryland, Baltimore, Maryland; and § InterAction
Working Group, Northern Netherlands, The Netherlands.
This article has been cited by other articles:
![]() |
M L Murray, C S de Vries, and I C K Wong A drug utilisation study of antidepressants in children and adolescents using the General Practice Research Database Arch. Dis. Child., December 1, 2004; 89(12): 1098 - 1102. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||