Institute of Hygiene and Environmental Medicine, Charité-Universitätsmedizin, Berlin, Germany.
Institute for Infection Prevention and Hospital Epidemiology, Medical Center-University of Freiburg, Faculty of Medicine, University of Freiburg, Freiburg, Germany.
PLoS One. 2018 Feb 23;13(2):e0193336. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0193336. eCollection 2018.
Knowledge concerning antibiotic use in the general population is insufficient. The way health literacy is related to antibiotic use aside from knowledge needs further investigation. Our aim was to compare the levels of knowledge of antibiotics and health literacy in individuals who had taken antibiotics in recent years compared with those who not had taken antibiotics.
A population-based cross-sectional survey of 2,000 individuals aged 35 and older from Berlin, Germany and its surrounding rural and suburban areas (response rate 59%) with strata urban/rural, sex, age, and education. Computer-assisted personal interviews were conducted by external, trained interviewers during home visits. Knowledge, health literacy, and antibiotic use were assessed using standardized questionnaires.
In all, 33.3% (666/2,000) of the participants indicated having had an antimicrobial therapy during the previous 12 months. Adjusting for sex, age, educational level and health literacy, individuals with four correct answers regarding antibiotics were 1.70 times and those with three correct answers 1.94 more likely to have had a history of recent antibiotic use than those who did not have any correct answers. Individuals with sufficient health literacy were 0.57 times less likely to have had a recent history of antibiotic use than individuals with insufficient health literacy.
Patients who have used antibiotics might have more knowledge as a result of their recent involvement with the topic of antibiotic use; health literacy may be a preventive mechanism to use antibiotics more critically. Besides improving the health knowledge of the general population and of vulnerable groups such as patients with low levels of health literacy, intervention strategies should focus on providers as well.
公众对抗生素使用的了解不足。除了知识之外,健康素养与抗生素使用的关系还需要进一步研究。我们的目的是比较近年来使用过抗生素和未使用过抗生素的个体的抗生素知识和健康素养水平。
这是一项基于人群的横断面研究,对德国柏林及其周边农村和郊区的 2000 名年龄在 35 岁及以上的个体(应答率为 59%)进行了调查,这些个体按城乡、性别、年龄和教育程度进行分层。由外部受过培训的访谈员在家庭访问中进行计算机辅助个人访谈。使用标准化问卷评估知识、健康素养和抗生素使用情况。
在所有参与者中,33.3%(2000 人中有 666 人)表示在过去 12 个月内接受过抗菌治疗。调整性别、年龄、教育水平和健康素养后,对于抗生素有 4 个正确答案的个体近期使用抗生素的可能性是没有正确答案的个体的 1.70 倍,有 3 个正确答案的个体近期使用抗生素的可能性是没有正确答案的个体的 1.94 倍。具有足够健康素养的个体近期使用抗生素的可能性比健康素养不足的个体低 0.57 倍。
由于最近涉及抗生素使用的话题,使用过抗生素的患者可能会有更多的知识;健康素养可能是更谨慎地使用抗生素的预防机制。除了提高普通人群和健康素养水平较低的弱势群体(如患者)的健康知识外,干预策略还应关注提供者。