格林纳达卫生保健从业人员对抗菌素耐药性的认识水平

Glasgow Lindonne, F. Stephanie, G. Owen, F. Martin
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引用次数: 3

摘要

格林纳达卫生保健从业人员对抗菌药物耐药性的认识水平。抗微生物耐药性(AMR)已成为全球突发公共卫生事件,格林纳达医疗从业者对该问题的了解和态度程度有限。对注册医生、药剂师和病理学实验室技术人员进行了一项横断面研究,利用自我管理的调查来评估卫生保健工作者对格林纳达抗微生物耐药性的了解。研究发现,虽然大多数从业者都能正确定义AMR,但对明智使用抗菌药物的认识存在差异。大约四分之一的医生(26.4%)不知道AMR是否是他们执业机构的一个重大问题,而大多数医生(61.7%)表示这不是问题。然而,41.6%的药剂师认为AMR是一个全国性的问题;尽管据报道,所有(100%)实验室技术人员都不知道AMR是否是一个重大的国家问题。超过50.0%的健康从业者认为有三个关键因素导致了AMR:患者需要抗生素,不必要地开抗生素处方,以及患者对抗生素的建议不足。绝大多数医生(75.5%)、药剂师(83.3%)和所有实验室技术人员(100.0%)都认为,缺乏监测患者抗生素使用史的监测系统是导致格林纳达对AMR问题缺乏了解的关键因素。这项研究强调,迫切需要继续开展AMR方面的专业发展,并制定可获得的政策、指导方针和强有力的抗菌药物安全和明智使用监测系统,以改善格林纳达的抗菌药物管理。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Health Care Practitioners Level of Awareness on Antimicrobial Resistance in Grenada
Health care practitioners’ level of awareness on antimicrobial resistance in Grenada. Antimicrobial Resistance (AMR) has become a global public health emergency and there is limited evidence of the extent of healthcare practitioners’ knowledge and attitude to the issue in Grenada. A cross-sectional study utilising self-administered surveys was conducted with registered physicians, pharmacists, and pathology laboratory technicians to evaluate health care workers knowledge about antimicrobial resistance in Grenada. The study found that while most practitioners could correctly define AMR, there was variability in knowledge about the judicious use of antimicrobials. About one in four physicians (26.4%) did not know whether AMR was a significant problem in the institution(s) where they practiced, compared with the majority (61.7%) who said it was not a problem. However, 41.6% of pharmacists felt that AMR was a national problem; although all (100%) laboratory technicians reportedly did not know if AMR was a significant national problem. Three key factors were perceived by more than 50.0% of each health practitioner group to have contributed to AMR: patients demanding antibiotics, unnecessarily prescribing antimicrobials, and insufficient patient advice about antibiotics. The vast majority of physicians (75.5%), pharmacists (83.3%), and all laboratory technicians (100.0%) agreed that the lack of a surveillance system for monitoring patient history of antibiotic use was a key factor contributing to lack of understanding of AMR issues in Grenada. This study highlights the urgent need for continuing professional development on AMR and the development of accessible policies, guidelines and a robust surveillance system on the safe and judicious use of antimicrobials to improve antimicrobial stewardship in Grenada.
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