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Consultations, prescribed topical treatments and disease severity in children with eczema in primary care: analysis of electronic medical records in the BATHE study

Consultations, prescribed topical treatments and disease severity in children with eczema in primary care: analysis of electronic medical records in the BATHE study
Consultations, prescribed topical treatments and disease severity in children with eczema in primary care: analysis of electronic medical records in the BATHE study
Background: in countries with well-resourced primary care, most children with eczema are managed by their General Practitioner (GP) but we know little about how often they are seen or how they are treated.

Objectives: to describe patterns of consultations and prescribing by eczema severity for children with eczema.

Methods: analysis of electronic medical record data from 422/483 participants in the BATHE study. We used descriptive statistics to compare participants characteristics, consultation and prescribing patterns. We explored associations with eczema severity (POEM), age and gender using Poisson and linear regression models.

Results: mean (SD) age 4.8 (2.9) years and POEM 10.0 (5.8). Over 12 months, 386 children had a median (IQR) of 4.0 (2-7) consultations. Of 2049 encounters, 1421 (69.4%) were for an eczema flare. Emollients were the most commonly prescribed item, with a mean of 4.6 prescriptions (507.9 g/ml) per child, yet 32.0% were not prescribed any. On average, children were prescribed 1.3 different emollient-types, with cream being most common (79.5% children, 66.5% prescriptions). 51.4% were prescribed a topical corticosteroid (TCS) with a mean of 2.8 prescriptions (50.6 g) per child and a mean of 1.4 different TCS potency-types (mild being the most common 73.3% children, 56.7% prescriptions). Number of consultations but not quantity of emollients and TCS prescribed were associated to age and eczema severity.

Conclusions: children with eczema are seen frequently in primary care but are prescribed less emollient and TCS than might be appropriate for age and severity.

0307-6938
Ridd, Mathew J.
7c956df7-7921-49da-b318-4fefeec5b974
Stuart, Beth
aadc0e97-61f0-4e95-9fbb-109b7d2ff59f
Santer, Miriam
3ce7e832-31eb-4d27-9876-3a1cd7f381dc
Granell, Raquel
06e9e006-3754-4cc9-b3fc-42024bd05123
Ridd, Mathew J.
7c956df7-7921-49da-b318-4fefeec5b974
Stuart, Beth
aadc0e97-61f0-4e95-9fbb-109b7d2ff59f
Santer, Miriam
3ce7e832-31eb-4d27-9876-3a1cd7f381dc
Granell, Raquel
06e9e006-3754-4cc9-b3fc-42024bd05123

Ridd, Mathew J., Stuart, Beth, Santer, Miriam and Granell, Raquel (2026) Consultations, prescribed topical treatments and disease severity in children with eczema in primary care: analysis of electronic medical records in the BATHE study. Clinical and Experimental Dermatology, [llag056]. (doi:10.1093/ced/llag056).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background: in countries with well-resourced primary care, most children with eczema are managed by their General Practitioner (GP) but we know little about how often they are seen or how they are treated.

Objectives: to describe patterns of consultations and prescribing by eczema severity for children with eczema.

Methods: analysis of electronic medical record data from 422/483 participants in the BATHE study. We used descriptive statistics to compare participants characteristics, consultation and prescribing patterns. We explored associations with eczema severity (POEM), age and gender using Poisson and linear regression models.

Results: mean (SD) age 4.8 (2.9) years and POEM 10.0 (5.8). Over 12 months, 386 children had a median (IQR) of 4.0 (2-7) consultations. Of 2049 encounters, 1421 (69.4%) were for an eczema flare. Emollients were the most commonly prescribed item, with a mean of 4.6 prescriptions (507.9 g/ml) per child, yet 32.0% were not prescribed any. On average, children were prescribed 1.3 different emollient-types, with cream being most common (79.5% children, 66.5% prescriptions). 51.4% were prescribed a topical corticosteroid (TCS) with a mean of 2.8 prescriptions (50.6 g) per child and a mean of 1.4 different TCS potency-types (mild being the most common 73.3% children, 56.7% prescriptions). Number of consultations but not quantity of emollients and TCS prescribed were associated to age and eczema severity.

Conclusions: children with eczema are seen frequently in primary care but are prescribed less emollient and TCS than might be appropriate for age and severity.

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Accepted/In Press date: 25 January 2026
Published date: 3 February 2026

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 509735
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/509735
ISSN: 0307-6938
PURE UUID: 4b8e7eec-99df-47dc-8f90-982c2235b4de
ORCID for Miriam Santer: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-7264-5260

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Date deposited: 03 Mar 2026 18:03
Last modified: 07 Mar 2026 03:10

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Contributors

Author: Mathew J. Ridd
Author: Beth Stuart
Author: Miriam Santer ORCID iD
Author: Raquel Granell

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