爱尔兰父母对儿童抗生素治疗的看法——一项定性研究。

IF 3.3 Q2 INFECTIOUS DISEASES
JAC-Antimicrobial Resistance Pub Date : 2025-10-07 eCollection Date: 2025-10-01 DOI:10.1093/jacamr/dlaf176
Anthony Maher, Eimear C Morrissey, Andrew W Murphy, Gerard J Molloy
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景和目的:儿科呼吸道感染可能是初级卫生保健中抗生素处方的常见原因。尽管管理努力,处方模式往往偏离循证指南。关于父母的信念和行为如何影响临床决策的探索有限。这项定性研究探讨了父母对爱尔兰抗生素治疗寻求行为的看法。方法:我们对爱尔兰20位有8岁以下孩子的父母进行了半结构化访谈。访谈以COM-B(能力,机会,动机-行为)模型为指导。访谈数据采用自反性主题分析法进行归纳分析。在此之后,将相关主题和子主题映射到COM-B的域。结果:该研究确定了三个关键主题:(i)在抗菌素耐药性(AMR)和抗生素使用方面存在感知到的知识差距,捕获了参与者如何将抗菌素耐药性谈判描述为个人健康风险,同时也将抗菌素耐药性作为一项遥远的政策;(ii)导航专业看门人描述了与全科医生(GP)咨询的角色,非工作时间医生悖论,信任药剂师和将接待员视为隐藏的看门人,他们都塑造了获得护理的机会;(iii)决定何时采取行动反映了人们在决定寻求治疗时如何寻求务实的安慰和管理疾病升级焦虑。结论:该研究强调需要针对社会文化量身定制抗菌素耐药性信息和干预措施,以解决父母的担忧和系统性障碍。通过集中父母的声音,本研究强调了通过改善沟通、认识和扩大初级卫生保健团队的作用来加强抗菌药物管理的机会。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Parents' perspectives on childhood antibiotic treatment in Ireland-a qualitative study.

Parents' perspectives on childhood antibiotic treatment in Ireland-a qualitative study.

Background and objectives: Paediatric respiratory tract infections can be a common reason for antibiotic prescribing in primary healthcare. Despite stewardship efforts, prescribing patterns often diverge from evidence-based guidelines. There are limited explorations of how parental beliefs and behaviours shape clinical decision-making. This qualitative study explored parental perspectives on antibiotic treatment-seeking behaviour in Ireland.

Methods: We carried out semi-structured interviews with 20 parents who had children under 8 years old in Ireland. The interviews were guided by the COM-B (Capability, Opportunity, Motivation - Behaviour) model. The interview data was analysed inductively, using reflexive thematic analysis. Following this, relevant themes and subthemes were mapped to the domains of the COM-B.

Results: The study identified three key themes: (i) experiencing perceived knowledge gaps in antimicrobial resistance (AMR) and antibiotic use captured how participants described negotiating AMR as a personal health risk while also experiencing AMR as a distant policy; (ii) navigating professional gatekeepers described the role of consulting with the general practitioner (GP), the out-of-hours doctor paradox, trusting the pharmacist and seeing receptionists as hidden gatekeepers who all shaped access to care; and (iii) deciding when to act reflected how people sought pragmatic reassurance and managed illness escalation anxiety in making decisions about seeking treatment.

Conclusions: The study underscores the need for socio-culturally tailored antimicrobial resistance messaging and interventions that address both parental concerns and systemic barriers. By centring parental voices, this research highlights opportunities to strengthen antimicrobial stewardship through improved communication, recognition and expanded roles for the primary healthcare team.

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CiteScore
5.30
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