Barker Anna K, Brown Kelli, Ahsan Muneeb, Sengupta Sharmila, Safdar Nasia
Department of Population Health Sciences, University of Wisconsin, School of Medicine and Public Health, Madison, Wisconsin, USA.
Medanta Institute of Education and Research, Medanta the Medicity Hospital, Gurgaon, Haryana, India.
BMJ Open. 2017 Mar 2;7(3):e013190. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2016-013190.
There are only 0.70 licensed physicians per 1000 people in India. Thus, pharmacies are a primary source of healthcare and patients often seek their services directly, especially in village settings. However, there is wide variability in a pharmacy employee's training, which contributes to inappropriate antibiotic dispensing and misuse. These practices increase the risk of antibiotic resistance and poor patient outcomes. This study seeks to better understand the factors that drive inappropriate antibiotic dispensing among pharmacy employees in India's village communities.
We conducted a mixed-methods study of the antibiotic dispensing practices, including semistructured interviews and a pilot cross-sectional Knowledge, Attitudes and Practice survey. All data were transcribed, translated from Hindi into English, and coded for themes.
Community pharmacies in villages in Haryana, India.
We recruited 24 community pharmacy employees (all male) by convenience sampling. Participants have a range of characteristics regarding village location, monthly income, baseline antibiotic knowledge, formal education and licensure.
75% of pharmacy employees in our study were unlicensed practitioners, and the majority had very limited understanding of antibiotic resistance. Furthermore, only half could correctly define the term antibiotics. All reported that at times they dispensed antibiotics without a prescription. This practice was more common when treating patients who had limited access to a licensed physician because of economic or logistic reasons. Many pharmacy workers also felt pressure to provide shortened medication courses to poorer clientele, and often dispensed only 1 or 2 days' worth of antibiotics. Such patients rarely returned to the pharmacy for the complete course.
This study highlights the need for short-term, intensive training programmes on antibiotic prescribing and resistance that can be disseminated to village pharmacies. Programme development should take into account the realities of working with poor clientele, especially in areas of limited healthcare access.
印度每1000人仅有0.70名执业医师。因此,药房是医疗保健的主要来源,患者常常直接寻求药房服务,尤其是在乡村地区。然而,药房员工的培训水平差异很大,这导致了抗生素的不恰当配药和滥用。这些做法增加了抗生素耐药性风险以及不良患者预后。本研究旨在更好地了解印度乡村社区药房员工进行不恰当抗生素配药的驱动因素。
我们针对抗生素配药行为开展了一项混合方法研究,包括半结构化访谈和一项试点横断面知识、态度与实践调查。所有数据都进行了转录,从印地语翻译成英语,并针对主题进行编码。
印度哈里亚纳邦乡村的社区药房。
我们通过便利抽样招募了24名社区药房员工(均为男性)。参与者在村庄位置、月收入、抗生素基础知识、正规教育程度和执照方面具有一系列不同特征。
我们研究中的75%药房员工是无执照从业者,且大多数人对抗生素耐药性的了解非常有限。此外,只有一半的人能够正确定义抗生素一词。所有人都报告说他们有时会在没有处方的情况下配药。这种做法在治疗因经济或后勤原因难以接触到执业医师的患者时更为常见。许多药房工作人员也感到有压力为较贫困的顾客提供缩短疗程的药物,并且常常只配1或2天剂量的抗生素。这类患者很少返回药房完成整个疗程。
本研究强调需要为乡村药房开展关于抗生素处方和耐药性的短期强化培训项目。项目开发应考虑到与贫困顾客打交道的实际情况,尤其是在医疗服务获取有限的地区。