https://www.selleckchem.com/products/durvalumab.html Background The off-label use of drugs to treat children is a global practice attributed to the traditional exclusion of children from clinical trials mainly due to practical and ethical reasons. Off-label drug use carries both benefits and risks, but data regarding this use pattern are scanty in sub-Saharan Africa. Objective To determine the incidence and predictors of off-label antibiotic use in children less than 5 years admitted at Mbarara Regional Referral Hospital (MRRH) in southwestern Uganda. Setting A prospective drug utilisation study was conducted among in-patients at the Paediatric Ward of MRRH from May to June 2019. Methods Clinical records and treatment notes of all children aged 0 to 59 months with at least one antibiotic prescription during the admission period were reviewed and included for data collection. Key informant interviews were conducted with physicians attending to patients in the Paediatric Ward. Main outcome measure Off-label use and potential predictors of off-label antibiotic useategory of off-label drug use, while off-label dose was the minor category. Age was a significant factor for off-label antibiotic prescription, with infants receiving the highest number of off-label prescriptions. Attending physicians identified several justifiable circumstances that warrant off-label antibiotic use and support emerging "well-founded" off-label uses of antibiotics in different paediatric age groups.Background Increasing evidence for the use of the aspirin in patients undergoing an orthopaedic surgery for venous thromboembolism prophylaxis has led to a change in the national guidelines substituting anticoagulants with aspirin. Little is known about the impact of such substitution on real-world outcomes from clinical practice. Objective The study was designed to examine clinical outcomes associated with the use of aspirin and apixaban. Setting Two large-scale general hospitals in West Yorkshire