Doctors' perceptions of antimicrobial resistance in the Northern West Bank, Palestine: a qualitative study.

IF 3.7 Q2 INFECTIOUS DISEASES
JAC-Antimicrobial Resistance Pub Date : 2024-12-26 eCollection Date: 2025-02-01 DOI:10.1093/jacamr/dlae198
Lotta Gustafsson, Zaher Nazzal, Connie Mary Wiskin, Souad Belkebir, Shameq Sayeed, Alix Wood
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Abstract

Objectives: In the West Bank, antimicrobial resistance (AMR) is increasingly and alarmingly common. Efforts are being made to introduce antimicrobial stewardship programmes (ASPs). This study explores doctors' perceptions of AMR and context-specific barriers and facilitators to ASPs at a critical point in national ASP development.

Methods: Semi-structured interviews were conducted with 22 doctors working in primary healthcare, government and non-governmental hospitals in Nablus in 2019. Two researchers thematically analysed the data.

Results: Participants recognized antibiotic resistance as a major threat to health. Few felt that doctors were well informed about ASPs; many had not heard of them. However, there was willingness to expand and begin new education programmes. Barriers and facilitators to ASPs included: (i) doctors were perceived to 'misuse' antibiotics, lack awareness, favour short-term outcomes, and externalize blame; (ii) patients reportedly treat antibiotics 'like analgesia' with high expectations of doctors; (iii) resource limitations make ASPs and infection control difficult-a lack of drugs, laboratory services, infectious disease specialists, and research to develop local guidelines; and (iv) top-down policy is recommended to restrict access to antibiotics without a prescription, but should be coupled with support, collaboration and community action.

Conclusions: Doctors' appreciation of the severity of the issue, and willingness for the expansion of existing programmes targeted at their own prescribing practices, provides a strong foundation for successful ASPs. A top-down approach to prevent inappropriate antibiotic prescribing is welcomed by participating doctors. If financial and resource limitations could be addressed, a continued multifaceted approach may enable physician, pharmacist and patient behaviours to change.

医生对巴勒斯坦西岸北部抗菌素耐药性的看法:一项定性研究。
目的:在西岸,抗菌素耐药性(AMR)日益普遍,令人震惊。正在努力引入抗微生物药物管理规划(asp)。本研究探讨了在国家ASP发展的关键时刻,医生对抗菌素耐药性的看法以及特定情境下的ASP障碍和促进因素。方法:对2019年在纳布卢斯初级卫生保健、政府和非政府医院工作的22名医生进行半结构化访谈。两位研究人员对这些数据进行了主题分析。结果:参与者认识到抗生素耐药性是对健康的主要威胁。很少有人认为医生对asp有充分的了解;很多人都没听说过。但是,有扩大和开始新的教育方案的意愿。asp的障碍和促进因素包括:(i)医生被认为“滥用”抗生素,缺乏认识,偏爱短期结果,并将责任外部化;(ii)据报道,患者把抗生素当作“镇痛药”对待,对医生抱有很高的期望;(iii)资源有限,使得asp和感染控制变得困难——缺乏药物、实验室服务、传染病专家和制定当地指南的研究;(iv)建议采取自上而下的政策限制无处方抗生素的获取,但应辅以支持、合作和社区行动。结论:医生认识到问题的严重性,并愿意针对自己的处方实践扩大现有方案,为成功的asp提供了坚实的基础。参与的医生欢迎自上而下的方法来防止不当的抗生素处方。如果财政和资源限制可以解决,一个持续的多方面的方法可能使医生,药剂师和病人的行为改变。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
5.30
自引率
0.00%
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审稿时长
16 weeks
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