Colliers Annelies, Coenen Samuel, Remmen Roy, Philips Hilde, Anthierens Sibyl
Department of General Practice - Primary and Interdisciplinary Care, Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences, University of Antwerp, Wilrijk, Belgium.
Vaccine and Infectious Disease Institute (VAXINFECTIO), Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences, University of Antwerp, Wilrijk, Belgium.
BMJ Open. 2018 Sep 28;8(9):e023154. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2018-023154.
Antibiotics (ABs) are one of the most prescribed medications in out-of-hours (OOH) care in Belgium. Developing a better understanding of why ABs are prescribed in this setting is essential to improve prescribing habits.
To assess AB prescribing and dispensing challenges for general practitioners (GPs) and pharmacists in OOH primary care, and to identify context-specific elements that can help the implementation of behaviour change interventions to improve AB prescribing in this setting.
This is an exploratory qualitative study using semistructured interviews. This study is part of a participatory action research project.
Participants include 17 GPs and 1 manager, who work in a Belgian OOH general practitioners cooperative (GPC), and 5 pharmacists of the area covered by the GPC. The GPC serves a population of more than 187 000 people.
GPs feel the threshold to prescribe AB in OOH care is lower in comparion to office hours. GPs and pharmacists talk about the difference in their professional identity in OOH (they define their task differently, they feel more isolated, insecure, have the need to please and so on), type of patients (unknown patients, vulnerable patients, other ethnicities, demanding patients and so on), workload (they feel time-pressured) and lack of diagnostic tools or follow-up. They are aware of the problem of AB overprescribing, but they do not feel ownership of the problem.
The implementation of behaviour change interventions to improve AB prescribing in OOH primary care has to take these context specifics into account and could involve interprofessional collaboration between GPs and pharmacists.
NCT03082521; Pre-results.
抗生素是比利时非工作时间(OOH)医疗中最常开具的药物之一。更好地理解在此环境下开具抗生素的原因对于改善处方习惯至关重要。
评估非工作时间基层医疗中全科医生(GP)和药剂师在抗生素处方和配药方面面临的挑战,并确定特定背景因素,这些因素有助于实施行为改变干预措施以改善此环境下的抗生素处方。
这是一项使用半结构化访谈的探索性定性研究。本研究是参与式行动研究项目的一部分。
参与者包括在比利时非工作时间全科医生合作社(GPC)工作的17名全科医生和1名经理,以及GPC覆盖地区的5名药剂师。GPC服务人口超过18.7万。
全科医生认为与工作时间相比,非工作时间医疗中开具抗生素的门槛更低。全科医生和药剂师谈到了他们在非工作时间的职业身份差异(他们对任务的定义不同,感到更孤立、不安全,有取悦他人的需求等)、患者类型(未知患者、弱势患者、其他种族患者、要求苛刻的患者等)、工作量(他们感到时间紧迫)以及缺乏诊断工具或随访。他们意识到抗生素过度处方的问题,但不觉得自己是这个问题的责任主体。
在非工作时间基层医疗中实施改善抗生素处方的行为改变干预措施必须考虑这些特定背景因素,并且可能涉及全科医生和药剂师之间跨专业协作。
NCT03082521;预结果。