Kistler Christine E, Beeber Anna, Becker-Dreps Sylvia, Ward Kimberly, Meade Megan, Ross Brittany, Sloane Philip D
Cecil G. Sheps Center for Health Services Research, Department of Family Medicine, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, NC USA.
Cecil G. Sheps Center for Health Services Research, School of Nursing, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, NC USA.
BMC Nurs. 2017 Mar 11;16:12. doi: 10.1186/s12912-017-0203-9. eCollection 2017.
Antibiotic overuse causes antibiotic resistance, one of the most important threats to human health. Older adults, particularly those in nursing homes, often receive antibiotics when they are not indicated.
To understand knowledge, attitudes, and behaviors of nursing home (NH) nurses and community-dwelling older adults towards antibiotic use, especially in clinical situations consistent with antibiotic overuse, we conducted a mixed-method survey in two NHs and one Family Medicine clinic in North Carolina, among English-speaking nurses and community-dwelling, cognitively intact adults aged 65 years or older. Based on the Knowledge-Attitude-Practice model, the survey assessed knowledge, attitudes, and behavior towards antibiotic use, including three vignettes designed to elicit possible antibiotic overuse: asymptomatic bacteriuria (ASB), a viral upper respiratory illness (URI), and a wound from a fall.
Of 31 NH nurses and 66 community-dwelling older adults, 70% reported knowledge of the dangers of taking antibiotics. Nurses more often reported evidence-based attitudes towards antibiotics than older adults, except 39% agreed with the statement "by the time I am sick enough to go to the doctor with a cold, I expect an antibiotic", while only 28% of older adults agreed with it. A majority of nurses did not see the need for antibiotics in any of the three vignettes: 77% for the ASB vignette, 87% for the URI vignette, and 97% for the wound vignette. Among older adults, 50% did not perceive a need for antibiotics in the ASB vignette, 58% in the URI vignette, and 74% in the wound vignette.
While a substantial minority had no knowledge of the dangers of antibiotic use, non-evidence-based attitudes towards antibiotics, and behaviors indicating inappropriate management of suspected infections, most NH nurses and community-dwelling older adults know the harms of antibiotic use and demonstrate evidence-based attitudes and behaviors. However, more work is needed to improve the knowledge, attitudes and behaviors that may contribute to antibiotic overuse.
抗生素的过度使用导致了抗生素耐药性,这是对人类健康最重要的威胁之一。老年人,尤其是养老院中的老年人,在没有指征的情况下经常会接受抗生素治疗。
为了解养老院护士和居家老年人对抗生素使用的知识、态度和行为,特别是在与抗生素过度使用相符的临床情况下,我们在北卡罗来纳州的两家养老院和一家家庭医学诊所对会说英语的护士以及65岁及以上认知功能正常的居家成年人进行了一项混合方法调查。基于知识-态度-行为模型,该调查评估了对抗生素使用的知识、态度和行为,包括三个旨在引发可能的抗生素过度使用情况的案例:无症状菌尿(ASB)、病毒性上呼吸道疾病(URI)以及跌倒所致伤口。
在31名养老院护士和66名居家老年人中,70%报告了解服用抗生素的危害。护士比老年人更常报告基于循证的对抗生素的态度,但有39%的护士同意“当我感冒严重到足以去看医生时,我期望能得到抗生素”这一说法,而只有28%的老年人同意。大多数护士在三个案例中的任何一个中都认为不需要使用抗生素:无症状菌尿案例为77%,病毒性上呼吸道疾病案例为87%,伤口案例为97%。在老年人中,无症状菌尿案例中有50%认为不需要使用抗生素,病毒性上呼吸道疾病案例中有58%,伤口案例中有74%。
虽然有相当一部分人不了解抗生素使用的危害,对抗生素持有非循证的态度,且有表明对疑似感染处理不当的行为,但大多数养老院护士和居家老年人了解抗生素使用的危害,并表现出基于循证的态度和行为。然而,仍需要开展更多工作来改善可能导致抗生素过度使用的知识、态度和行为。