Advancing the safe motherhood initiative: A qualitative and sentiment analysis of local physician's perspectives on antibiotic self-medication during pregnancy in a low- and middle-income country.

IF 2.5
PLOS global public health Pub Date : 2025-09-12 eCollection Date: 2025-01-01 DOI:10.1371/journal.pgph.0004794
K Umeh, S Adaji, M Sacks, G U Eleje, E O Umeh, S Ushie, C G Okafor, C B Oguejiofor, U Bawa, S Bature, N H Madugu, R Singh, H Karuppuchamy
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Abstract

Although the Safe Motherhood Initiative is currently a global priority, the implications of maternal self-medication for meeting Safe Motherhood and Sustainable Development Goal 3 objectives in low- and middle-income countries has yet to be addressed. Although local medical doctors are an influential stakeholder group, able to determine health policy, how they view and feel about the problem of antimicrobial self-medication during pregnancy is not well understood. Thus, this study explores physicians' views and sentiments regarding antibiotic self-medication in pregnant women from a West African country. We used mixed qualitative and quantitative analytic approaches. Semi-structured interviews were conducted with 25 medical doctors working in three tertiary hospitals. Thematic analysis was employed to identify key perspectives, while sentiment analysis was used to determine the emotional tone, based on an open-source pre-trained machine learning model for natural language processing. Several checks for methodological rigour were performed, including reviewing records of over 800 email conversations, and conducting respondent validation. Seven distinct themes emerged depicting views on antimicrobial treatment (e.g., easy availability of antibiotics), patient behaviour (e.g., use of medicinal herbs) and policy guidelines on antibiotics stewardship (lack of clear protocols). The prevailing sentiment portrayed a predominantly neutral demeanour towards antibiotic self-medication during pregnancy (χ2 (1, N = 1484) = 1314.858, p < 0.001), with an unusually high number of neutral labels, compared with positive (z = -36.058, p < 0.001) and negative (z = -36.410, p < 0.001) categories. The results of this investigation can provide useful information for managing antibiotic self-medication in pregnant women from resource-deprived regions where medical doctors are influential stakeholders. Our findings can be used to tailor local Safe motherhood policy initiatives on antimicrobial stewardship during pregnancy such that they address physician's concerns and sentiments, including insufficient clinical practice guidelines and an ostensible lack of urgency.

推进安全孕产倡议:对低收入和中等收入国家当地医生在怀孕期间自行服用抗生素的观点进行定性和情感分析。
尽管安全孕产倡议目前是一项全球优先事项,但在低收入和中等收入国家,产妇自我药疗对实现安全孕产和可持续发展目标3的影响尚未得到解决。虽然当地医生是一个有影响力的利益相关者群体,能够决定卫生政策,但他们对怀孕期间自行服用抗微生物药物问题的看法和感受尚不清楚。因此,本研究探讨了来自西非国家的医生对孕妇抗生素自我用药的看法和看法。我们使用了混合的定性和定量分析方法。对在三所三级医院工作的25名医生进行了半结构化访谈。主题分析用于识别关键观点,而情感分析用于确定情感基调,基于开源的预训练机器学习模型用于自然语言处理。对方法的严谨性进行了几项检查,包括审查800多封电子邮件对话的记录,并进行受访者验证。出现了七个不同的主题,描述了对抗菌素治疗(例如,抗生素的易得性)、患者行为(例如,草药的使用)和抗生素管理政策指南(缺乏明确的方案)的看法。普遍的情绪描绘了在怀孕期间对抗生素自我用药的中立态度(χ2 (1, N = 1484) = 1314.858, p
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