Impact of education on antibiotic literacy and awareness among pharmacy students at a Japanese university: a questionnaire survey.

IF 1.2 Q4 PHARMACOLOGY & PHARMACY
Masayuki Maeda, Kozue Yamaguchi
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Abstract

Background: Considering the global threat of antimicrobial resistance (AMR), Japan implemented a national action plan in 2016 that emphasized antibiotic education for healthcare professionals. However, pharmacy education in Japan lacks comprehensive antimicrobial stewardship (AMS) content, leading to insufficient antibiotic awareness and literacy among graduates. This study aimed to assess and improve antibiotic literacy and awareness among undergraduate pharmacy students at Showa University.

Methods: Students who were admitted in 2015 were given a 90-min lecture on AMS, covering acute upper respiratory infections, before their fifth-year clinical training in 2019. The lecture was delivered by a certified pharmacist in infection control. A paper-based, anonymous self-administered questionnaire survey on antibiotic knowledge and literacy was distributed to first- and fifth-year students in 2019 and fifth-year students in 2023. The questions in the survey were based on the Antibiotics Awareness Survey 2018.

Results: The survey results showed an 82-99% response rate among first- and fifth-year pharmacy students in 2019 and 2023. Although two-thirds of first-year pharmacy students lacked antibiotic knowledge, most fifth-year students had appropriate knowledge. Moreover, fifth-year students had a proper understanding of bacterial infections and antibiotic identification, which improved after clinical training and additional lectures. The percentage of students who would stop using antibiotics when they felt better dropped from 39% among first-year students to 21% among fifth-year students. Fifth-year students were more likely to dispose of leftover antibiotics and less likely to keep them than first-year students. Over 80% of students provided antibiotic counseling primarily for common cold treatments during clinical training.

Conclusions: The survey results highlighted gaps in antibiotic awareness among Japanese pharmacy students and demonstrated the positive impact of education. This study emphasizes the need for an antibiotic literacy curriculum, especially for viral respiratory infections, to support efforts in curbing AMR. Moreover, policymakers should develop policies for developing and securing faculty that are knowledgeable in clinical infectious diseases across Japanese pharmacy schools.

教育对日本一所大学药学学生抗生素知识和意识的影响:一项问卷调查。
背景:考虑到抗菌素耐药性(AMR)的全球威胁,日本于2016年实施了一项国家行动计划,强调对医疗保健专业人员进行抗生素教育。然而,日本的药学教育缺乏全面的抗菌药物管理(AMS)内容,导致毕业生对抗生素的认识和素养不足。本研究旨在评估和提高昭和大学药学本科学生对抗生素的认知和认识。方法:在2019年第5年临床培训前,对2015年入学的学生进行90分钟的AMS课程,涵盖急性上呼吸道感染。讲座是由一位感染控制方面的执业药剂师做的。2019年和2023年分别向一年级和五年级学生和五年级学生分发了一份关于抗生素知识和读写能力的纸质匿名自我调查问卷。调查中的问题基于2018年抗生素认知调查。结果:调查结果显示,2019年和2023年药学一年级和五年级学生的回复率为82-99%。虽然三分之二的药学一年级学生缺乏抗生素知识,但大多数五年级学生有适当的知识。此外,五年级学生对细菌感染和抗生素鉴定有了正确的认识,经过临床培训和额外的讲座,这一认识有所提高。在感觉好转后会停止使用抗生素的学生比例从一年级学生的39%下降到五年级学生的21%。与一年级学生相比,五年级学生更有可能处理掉剩余的抗生素,而保留抗生素的可能性更小。超过80%的学生在临床培训期间主要为普通感冒治疗提供抗生素咨询。结论:调查结果突出了日本药学专业学生抗生素认知的差距,显示了教育的积极影响。这项研究强调需要抗生素扫盲课程,特别是病毒性呼吸道感染,以支持遏制抗生素耐药性的努力。此外,政策制定者应该制定政策,在日本的药学院培养和确保在临床传染病方面知识渊博的教师。
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
1.80
自引率
0.00%
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29
审稿时长
8 weeks
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