“一些病人要求开抗生素处方”:对乌干达一家私营卫生机构合理使用抗微生物药物的障碍和促进因素的评估。

IF 3.7 Q2 INFECTIOUS DISEASES
JAC-Antimicrobial Resistance Pub Date : 2024-12-18 eCollection Date: 2024-12-01 DOI:10.1093/jacamr/dlae204
Mark Kizito, Rejani Lalitha, Henry Kajumbula, Richard Muhumuza, Moses Grace Kintu, David Muyanja, Pauline Byakika-Kibwika
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:抗菌素滥用和过度使用传播抗菌素耐药性,但在低资源环境下影响抗生素处方决策因素的数据有限。我们描述了影响抗菌药物处方的因素在乌干达一家大型三级护理私人非营利性医院。方法:我们对乌干达坎帕拉一家私人非营利性医院的12名处方者(4名实习医生、6名医务官员和2名内科医生)进行了描述现象学定性研究,其中包括面对面深入访谈。录音和存档笔记逐字抄录,并通过内容分析手工分析。记录和报告了新出现的主题和分主题。结果:出现了三个广泛的主题:乌干达抗菌素使用的经验,合理抗菌素处方的障碍和促进因素以及解决不合理抗菌素使用的措施。与会者认识到,抗生素的使用往往不合理,即使在感染的临床证据不确定的情况下也会开处方,并受到药物促进剂的影响,并注意到抗生素耐药性很高。患者的症状和临床体征、以往使用抗生素的经验、对不良结果的恐惧、患者的需求和期望、资深同事的影响、临床调查的周转时间和药品营销人员是抗菌药物处方的障碍和促进因素。开处方者也承认有必要更新临床指南,建立医院抗生素图,并提供关于合理使用抗微生物药物的持续医学教育。结论:影响该院抗生素处方决策的内在因素和外在因素的复杂相互作用。需要通过对开处方者的持续教育和培训、提供当地处方指南和抗生素图以及实施非处方抗生素销售条例等有针对性的干预措施,才能实施强有力的抗菌素管理规划,成功遏制抗菌素耐药性。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
'Some patients demand for a prescription of an antibiotic': an assessment of barriers and facilitators to rational antimicrobial use in a private health facility in Uganda.

Background: Antimicrobial misuse and overuse propagate antimicrobial resistance, yet data on factors influencing antibiotic prescription decisions in low-resource settings are limited. We describe factors influencing antimicrobial prescription at a large tertiary care private not-for-profit hospital in Uganda.

Methods: We conducted a descriptive phenomenology qualitative study involving face-to-face in-depth interviews of 12 purposively selected prescribers (four intern doctors, six medical officers and two Internal Medicine physicians) in a private not-for-profit hospital in Kampala, Uganda. Audio recordings and filed notes were transcribed verbatim and analysed manually by content analysis. Emerging themes and sub-themes were recorded and reported.

Results: Three broad themes emerged: experience with antimicrobial use in Uganda, barriers and facilitators to rational antimicrobial prescription and measures to address irrational antimicrobial use. Participants recognized that antibiotics are often used irrationally, prescribed even when there is uncertainty regarding clinical evidence for infection, and influenced by drug promoters, and noted high levels of antibiotic resistance. Patients' symptoms and clinical signs, previous experience using antibiotics, fear of bad outcomes, patient demand and expectations, influence from senior colleagues, the turnaround time of clinical investigations and drug marketers were the barriers and facilitators to antimicrobial prescription. Prescribers also acknowledged the need to update clinical guidelines, set up hospital antibiograms, and provide continuous medical education on rational antimicrobial use.

Conclusions: A complex interplay of intrinsic and extrinsic factors influences antibiotic prescribing decisions in this hospital. Targeted interventions through continuous education and training for prescribers, providing local prescription guidelines and antibiograms and implementing regulations on over-the-counter antibiotic sales are needed to implement robust antimicrobial stewardship programmes to curb antimicrobial resistance successfully.

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CiteScore
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