
A review of US commercial health insurance data found no association between topical antibiotic dispensation for acute infectious conjunctivitis (pink eye) and state-level return-to-school policies, researchers reported today in JAMA Pediatrics.
Using data from the 2021 MarketScan Commercial Claims and Encounters Database, researchers from Boston Children's Hospital, Harvard University, and University of California, San Francisco investigated topical antibiotic dispensing for children aged 3 to 17 who were diagnosed with acute infectious conjunctivitis. While guidelines do not recommend universal treatment for conjunctivitis, states have differing return-to-school policies, with some requiring medical evaluation and/or treatment with topical antibiotics and with others having no restrictions or no policy at all.
State policies have no impact
Among 26,901 children with acute infectious conjunctivitis (median age, 7 years; 48% female), topical antibiotics were dispensed to 69%. Antibiotics were more frequently prescribed to children who were preschool-aged, female, evaluated in the fall and winter seasons, and evaluated by non-eye specialists.
The state-level proportion of children treated with topical antibiotics ranged from 38% in Vermont to 83% in South Dakota. In a multivariable analysis, compared with no policy, neither the policy requiring evaluation, treatment, or symptom resolution (odds ratio [OR], 1.02; 95% confidence interval [CI], 0.87 to 1.20) nor the policy specifying no restrictions on return to school (OR, 1.02; 95% CI, 0.83 to 1.25) was associated with topical antibiotic treatment.
The study authors say that while topical antibiotic use may in some cases accelerate symptom resolution, antibiotic overuse remains a public health concern.
"These findings suggest that local policies, parental preferences, health care facility–level characteristics, or other unmeasured covariates may explain the observed variation in antibiotic treatment," the study authors wrote. "Further research is needed to identify factors underlying variation in antibiotic use and to promote uniform guidelines for practitioners and families."