Leal Helena Ferreira, Mamani Claudia, Quach Caroline, Bédard Emilie
Department of Microbiology, Infectious Diseases and Immunology, Faculty of Medicine, Université de Montréal, Quebec, Canada.
Department of Pharmacology and Physiology, Faculty of Medicine, Université de Montréal, Quebec, Canada.
J Assoc Med Microbiol Infect Dis Can. 2022 Sep 27;7(3):220-232. doi: 10.3138/jammi-2022-0008. eCollection 2022 Sep.
The World Health Organization (WHO) has declared that antimicrobial resistance is one of the top ten global public health threats humanity is facing. To tackle this problem, it is necessary to not only address it in the hospital setting, but even more so in the community. In this context, understanding people's knowledge, attitudes, and practices towards antimicrobial resistance is of utmost importance. Accordingly, we investigated whether students from the Université de Montréal (Quebec, Canada) had perceptions and behaviours that could foster bacterial resistance.
We conducted an observational, cross-sectional, prospective, and descriptive study from November 30 to December 11, 2020. We applied an online questionnaire (Google Forms) adapted from the WHO survey entitled 'Antibiotic resistance: Multi-country public awareness survey.'
Overall, 106 participants were included in this study. Most of them demonstrated reasonable understanding and behaviours related to antimicrobial resistance. Erroneous response proportions ranged from 0.9% to 25.5%, except for the statement 'Antibiotic resistance occurs when your body becomes resistant to antibiotics, and they no longer work,' where 63.2% of participants answered that it was true, even though it is false. Regarding antibiotic use, 28.3% of participants said they already had used antibiotics without a doctor's prescription. Of these, 55.2% were Canadian students.
This study indicates a possible misuse of antimicrobials in an area where antibiotics should not be easily accessible without a prescription. It is necessary to investigate why these medications are being used without being prescribed. Furthermore, we demonstrate a need to increase public awareness to better understand antimicrobial resistance's theoretical basis.
世界卫生组织(WHO)宣布,抗菌药物耐药性是人类面临的十大全球公共卫生威胁之一。为解决这一问题,不仅要在医院环境中应对,在社区中更是如此。在这种背景下,了解人们对抗菌药物耐药性的知识、态度和行为至关重要。因此,我们调查了蒙特利尔大学(加拿大魁北克)的学生是否具有可能助长细菌耐药性的认知和行为。
我们于2020年11月30日至12月11日进行了一项观察性、横断面、前瞻性和描述性研究。我们应用了一份根据WHO题为“抗生素耐药性:多国公众意识调查”的调查问卷改编的在线问卷(谷歌表单)。
总体而言,本研究纳入了106名参与者。他们中的大多数对抗菌药物耐药性表现出合理的理解和行为。错误回答比例在0.9%至25.5%之间,但对于“当你的身体对抗生素产生耐药性且抗生素不再起作用时,就会发生抗生素耐药性”这一表述,63.2%的参与者回答正确,尽管这是错误的。关于抗生素使用,28.3%的参与者表示他们已经在没有医生处方的情况下使用过抗生素。其中,55.2%是加拿大学生。
本研究表明,在一个没有处方就不容易获得抗生素的地区,可能存在抗菌药物的滥用情况。有必要调查为何这些药物在没有处方的情况下被使用。此外,我们证明有必要提高公众意识,以更好地理解抗菌药物耐药性的理论基础。