Prevention and Health Promotion Direction, Infectious and Environmental Risks Unit, Public Health France, Saint-Maurice, France.
Public Health France, Infectious Diseases Direction, Saint-Maurice, France.
Antimicrob Resist Infect Control. 2022 Oct 6;11(1):124. doi: 10.1186/s13756-022-01162-3.
During the last 20 years, France has taken important steps to tackle antibiotic resistance. These include national awareness campaigns for the general public, and supporting changes in terms of antibiotic prescription for healthcare practitioners. To prepare the upcoming 2022/2023 campaign, we conducted two surveys to assess (1) the general public's knowledge, attitudes and behaviours regarding antibiotics and (2) the perceptions and practices of general practitioners (GPs).
Two quantitative telephone surveys were conducted using the same methodology as that used in 2010 by the National Health Insurance Authority. The first was conducted in 2019 in a national representative quota sample of 1204 persons aged over 15 years living in metropolitan France, including an over-sample of 332 parents of children aged six years or under. The second was conducted in 2020 in a national representative sample of 388 GPs.
Twenty-seven percent of respondents reported taking antibiotics during the previous year. Sixty-five percent of GPs declared prescribing fewer antibiotics during the previous five years. However, 33% of GPs reported they often had patients who put high pressure to get antibiotics. The pressure from elderly patients, especially those with comorbidities was notable. Three percent of respondent patients reported putting often pressure on their GP. All respondents expressed total trust in their GP irrespective of whether s/he had prescribed them antibiotics. Half knew that antibiotics act only on bacteria, and 38% said they understood precisely what antibiotic resistance is.
Although antibiotic use is decreasing in France, patient pressure on GPs to prescribe antibiotics is very high. GPs are key ambassadors in reducing antibiotic use. Awareness campaigns must target elderly patients in particular.
在过去的 20 年里,法国在应对抗生素耐药性方面采取了重要措施。这些措施包括针对公众的全国性宣传活动,以及支持医疗保健从业者改变抗生素处方。为了筹备即将到来的 2022/2023 年的活动,我们进行了两项调查,以评估(1)公众对抗生素的知识、态度和行为,以及(2)全科医生的看法和做法。
我们使用与国家健康保险管理局在 2010 年使用的相同方法进行了两项定量电话调查。第一项调查于 2019 年在法国大都市地区 1204 名 15 岁以上的代表性全国配额样本中进行,其中包括 332 名 6 岁或以下儿童的父母的超额样本。第二项调查于 2020 年在全国范围内对 388 名全科医生进行了调查。
27%的受访者报告在过去一年中服用过抗生素。65%的全科医生表示在过去五年中开的抗生素处方减少了。然而,33%的全科医生报告说,他们经常有病人对开抗生素施加很大压力。老年患者,尤其是有合并症的患者,压力很大。3%的患者报告说,他们经常对他们的全科医生施加压力。所有受访者都表示完全信任他们的全科医生,无论他们是否给他们开了抗生素。一半的人知道抗生素只对细菌起作用,38%的人表示他们确切地知道什么是抗生素耐药性。
尽管法国的抗生素使用量正在减少,但患者对全科医生开抗生素的压力非常大。全科医生是减少抗生素使用的关键大使。宣传活动必须特别针对老年患者。