{"title":"赞比亚恩多拉地区抗疟药物自我治疗的决定因素:横断面研究","authors":"Namasiku Grace Susiku, Choolwe Jacobs, Jessy Zgambo, Patrick Kaonga, Lungowe Sitali","doi":"10.1101/2024.09.02.24312958","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Antimalarial drug resistance has been an obstacle in the fight against malaria over the years. Antimalarial self-medication is one of the factors associated with antimalarial resistance, and is on the rise globally and has become quite common among developing populations. Self-medication is when individuals choose and use medications to treat symptoms they perceive or diagnose themselves, without the guidance of a healthcare professional. This study aimed at investigating prevalence and determinants of antimalarial drug self-medication among adults in Ndola district, Zambia. A cross-sectional study was conducted among adults in Ndola district, Zambia in June 2023. Using multistage cluster sampling, 446 participants were randomly selected and interviewed through a mobile-based structured questionnaire administered by the researchers using Kobo collect/kobo toolbox. The head of household was the primary participant. Data was then exported to Microsoft Excel, cleaned and coded, and thereafter exported to STATA version 16.1 for analysis. Chi-square tests and logistic regression analysis was used to test associations between categorical variables and to estimate the odds of antimalarial drug self-medication associated with the explanatory variables. The prevalence of antimalarial drug self-medication was 20% in this study population and the factors significantly associated were; moderate to mild illness, bad experience with hospital care, lack of knowledge about antimalarial drug resistance, and the perception that antimalarial drug self-medication was not risky. The finding that antimalarial self-medication was common in this study population is suggestive of a poor state of the health-care delivery system possibly due to inadequate manpower, stock out of drugs in health facilities, and lack of awareness about the risks of self-medication. This further suggests that there is great need for regulatory authorities to strengthen drug regulations and update the list of over-the-counter and essential medicines to ensure the safety of public health. In addition, authorities should repackage malaria sensitization messages to strongly highlight the risks of antimalarial drug self-medication.","PeriodicalId":501071,"journal":{"name":"medRxiv - Epidemiology","volume":null,"pages":null},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2024-09-03","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Determinants of self-treatment with antimalarials in Ndola district, Zambia: a cross-sectional study\",\"authors\":\"Namasiku Grace Susiku, Choolwe Jacobs, Jessy Zgambo, Patrick Kaonga, Lungowe Sitali\",\"doi\":\"10.1101/2024.09.02.24312958\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"Antimalarial drug resistance has been an obstacle in the fight against malaria over the years. Antimalarial self-medication is one of the factors associated with antimalarial resistance, and is on the rise globally and has become quite common among developing populations. 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The prevalence of antimalarial drug self-medication was 20% in this study population and the factors significantly associated were; moderate to mild illness, bad experience with hospital care, lack of knowledge about antimalarial drug resistance, and the perception that antimalarial drug self-medication was not risky. The finding that antimalarial self-medication was common in this study population is suggestive of a poor state of the health-care delivery system possibly due to inadequate manpower, stock out of drugs in health facilities, and lack of awareness about the risks of self-medication. This further suggests that there is great need for regulatory authorities to strengthen drug regulations and update the list of over-the-counter and essential medicines to ensure the safety of public health. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
多年来,抗疟药物抗药性一直是抗击疟疾的障碍。抗疟自我药疗是抗疟药物耐药性的相关因素之一,在全球范围内呈上升趋势,在发展中国家人口中已相当普遍。自我用药是指个人在没有专业医护人员指导的情况下,选择和使用药物来治疗自己感知或诊断出的症状。本研究旨在调查赞比亚恩多拉地区成年人自我服用抗疟药物的流行率和决定因素。这项横断面研究于 2023 年 6 月在赞比亚恩多拉地区的成年人中进行。研究人员使用 Kobo collect/kobo toolbox,通过基于移动设备的结构化问卷对 446 名参与者进行了随机抽样和访谈。户主是主要参与者。数据随后被导出到 Microsoft Excel,经过清理和编码后,导出到 STATA 16.1 版进行分析。采用卡方检验和逻辑回归分析来检验分类变量之间的关联,并估算抗疟药物自我药疗与解释变量相关的几率。在本研究人群中,自行服用抗疟药物的发生率为 20%,与之密切相关的因素包括:中度至轻度疾病、医院护理经验不足、缺乏抗疟药物耐药性知识,以及认为自行服用抗疟药物没有风险。本研究发现,抗疟药物自我药疗在研究人群中很常见,这表明医疗保健服务系统的状况不佳,原因可能是人力不足、医疗机构药品短缺以及缺乏对自我药疗风险的认识。这进一步表明,监管当局亟需加强药品监管,更新非处方药和基本药物清单,以确保公众健康安全。此外,当局应重新包装疟疾宣传信息,大力强调自行服用抗疟药物的风险。
Determinants of self-treatment with antimalarials in Ndola district, Zambia: a cross-sectional study
Antimalarial drug resistance has been an obstacle in the fight against malaria over the years. Antimalarial self-medication is one of the factors associated with antimalarial resistance, and is on the rise globally and has become quite common among developing populations. Self-medication is when individuals choose and use medications to treat symptoms they perceive or diagnose themselves, without the guidance of a healthcare professional. This study aimed at investigating prevalence and determinants of antimalarial drug self-medication among adults in Ndola district, Zambia. A cross-sectional study was conducted among adults in Ndola district, Zambia in June 2023. Using multistage cluster sampling, 446 participants were randomly selected and interviewed through a mobile-based structured questionnaire administered by the researchers using Kobo collect/kobo toolbox. The head of household was the primary participant. Data was then exported to Microsoft Excel, cleaned and coded, and thereafter exported to STATA version 16.1 for analysis. Chi-square tests and logistic regression analysis was used to test associations between categorical variables and to estimate the odds of antimalarial drug self-medication associated with the explanatory variables. The prevalence of antimalarial drug self-medication was 20% in this study population and the factors significantly associated were; moderate to mild illness, bad experience with hospital care, lack of knowledge about antimalarial drug resistance, and the perception that antimalarial drug self-medication was not risky. The finding that antimalarial self-medication was common in this study population is suggestive of a poor state of the health-care delivery system possibly due to inadequate manpower, stock out of drugs in health facilities, and lack of awareness about the risks of self-medication. This further suggests that there is great need for regulatory authorities to strengthen drug regulations and update the list of over-the-counter and essential medicines to ensure the safety of public health. In addition, authorities should repackage malaria sensitization messages to strongly highlight the risks of antimalarial drug self-medication.