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Investigating the drivers for antibiotic use and misuse amongst medical undergraduates–perspectives from a Sri Lankan medical school

Medical undergraduates are a unique group who gain the theoretical knowledge on prescribing antibiotics but are not authorized to prescribe till full licensure. This unique situation may result in self-medication and unauthorized prescription of antibiotics. This cross-sectional study was conducted...

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Autores principales: Jayawardhana, Yasasuru, Premaratne, Avanthi, Kalpani, Sudeepa, Jayasundara, Sawindya, Jayawardhane, Gihan, Jayawarna, Chamini, Gamage, Sarala, Jayawardhana, Kalana, Johnsan, Radshana, Jayasundara, Chasith, Liyanapathirana, Veranja
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10027203/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36963066
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgph.0001740
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author Jayawardhana, Yasasuru
Premaratne, Avanthi
Kalpani, Sudeepa
Jayasundara, Sawindya
Jayawardhane, Gihan
Jayawarna, Chamini
Gamage, Sarala
Jayawardhana, Kalana
Johnsan, Radshana
Jayasundara, Chasith
Liyanapathirana, Veranja
author_facet Jayawardhana, Yasasuru
Premaratne, Avanthi
Kalpani, Sudeepa
Jayasundara, Sawindya
Jayawardhane, Gihan
Jayawarna, Chamini
Gamage, Sarala
Jayawardhana, Kalana
Johnsan, Radshana
Jayasundara, Chasith
Liyanapathirana, Veranja
author_sort Jayawardhana, Yasasuru
collection PubMed
description Medical undergraduates are a unique group who gain the theoretical knowledge on prescribing antibiotics but are not authorized to prescribe till full licensure. This unique situation may result in self-medication and unauthorized prescription of antibiotics. This cross-sectional study was conducted among medical students of the Faculty of Medicine, University of Peradeniya, Sri Lanka in 2021 to identify patterns and drivers for antibiotic use and misuse among medical undergraduates. A validated, self-administered Google forms-based online questionnaire was used to gather information on antibiotic use, misuse, and associated factors: demographics, knowledge and perceptions. Two scores; a practice score and a knowledge score were calculated to compare with the associated factors. The study population consisted of 347 medical students with a mean age of 24 (SD1.7) years and 142/347 (40.9%) were male participants. The patterns of misuses identified included; use of antibiotics without a prescription (161/347, 46.4%), keeping left-over antibiotics for future use (111/347, 32.0%), not completing the course of antibiotics (81/347, 23.3%), use of left-over antibiotics (74/347, 21.3%), prescribing to animals (61/347, 17.6%), prescribing antibiotics to family members or friends (51/347, 14.7%), antibiotic self-medication (25/347, 7.2%) and not following the dosage regime prescribed (24/347, 6.9%). The practice score ranged from 33% to 100% (median 87%, IQR 80.0–93.3) and did not differ significantly with either the gender or the year of study. The knowledge score ranged from 4% to 100% (median 87%, IQR: 71.5–95.4) differing significantly according to the year of study. Antibiotic prescription by medical undergraduates was perceived as unacceptable (329/347, 94.8%) by the majority. Individual misuse patterns were associated favourably or unfavourably with gender, year of study, having a health care worker at home and knowledge score. The knowledge score increased with the advancement in training at the medical school while the practice score remained indifferent, highlighting the need to identify the additional drivers of antibiotic misuse among medical undergraduates.
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spelling pubmed-100272032023-03-21 Investigating the drivers for antibiotic use and misuse amongst medical undergraduates–perspectives from a Sri Lankan medical school Jayawardhana, Yasasuru Premaratne, Avanthi Kalpani, Sudeepa Jayasundara, Sawindya Jayawardhane, Gihan Jayawarna, Chamini Gamage, Sarala Jayawardhana, Kalana Johnsan, Radshana Jayasundara, Chasith Liyanapathirana, Veranja PLOS Glob Public Health Research Article Medical undergraduates are a unique group who gain the theoretical knowledge on prescribing antibiotics but are not authorized to prescribe till full licensure. This unique situation may result in self-medication and unauthorized prescription of antibiotics. This cross-sectional study was conducted among medical students of the Faculty of Medicine, University of Peradeniya, Sri Lanka in 2021 to identify patterns and drivers for antibiotic use and misuse among medical undergraduates. A validated, self-administered Google forms-based online questionnaire was used to gather information on antibiotic use, misuse, and associated factors: demographics, knowledge and perceptions. Two scores; a practice score and a knowledge score were calculated to compare with the associated factors. The study population consisted of 347 medical students with a mean age of 24 (SD1.7) years and 142/347 (40.9%) were male participants. The patterns of misuses identified included; use of antibiotics without a prescription (161/347, 46.4%), keeping left-over antibiotics for future use (111/347, 32.0%), not completing the course of antibiotics (81/347, 23.3%), use of left-over antibiotics (74/347, 21.3%), prescribing to animals (61/347, 17.6%), prescribing antibiotics to family members or friends (51/347, 14.7%), antibiotic self-medication (25/347, 7.2%) and not following the dosage regime prescribed (24/347, 6.9%). The practice score ranged from 33% to 100% (median 87%, IQR 80.0–93.3) and did not differ significantly with either the gender or the year of study. The knowledge score ranged from 4% to 100% (median 87%, IQR: 71.5–95.4) differing significantly according to the year of study. Antibiotic prescription by medical undergraduates was perceived as unacceptable (329/347, 94.8%) by the majority. Individual misuse patterns were associated favourably or unfavourably with gender, year of study, having a health care worker at home and knowledge score. The knowledge score increased with the advancement in training at the medical school while the practice score remained indifferent, highlighting the need to identify the additional drivers of antibiotic misuse among medical undergraduates. Public Library of Science 2023-03-20 /pmc/articles/PMC10027203/ /pubmed/36963066 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgph.0001740 Text en © 2023 Jayawardhana et al https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Jayawardhana, Yasasuru
Premaratne, Avanthi
Kalpani, Sudeepa
Jayasundara, Sawindya
Jayawardhane, Gihan
Jayawarna, Chamini
Gamage, Sarala
Jayawardhana, Kalana
Johnsan, Radshana
Jayasundara, Chasith
Liyanapathirana, Veranja
Investigating the drivers for antibiotic use and misuse amongst medical undergraduates–perspectives from a Sri Lankan medical school
title Investigating the drivers for antibiotic use and misuse amongst medical undergraduates–perspectives from a Sri Lankan medical school
title_full Investigating the drivers for antibiotic use and misuse amongst medical undergraduates–perspectives from a Sri Lankan medical school
title_fullStr Investigating the drivers for antibiotic use and misuse amongst medical undergraduates–perspectives from a Sri Lankan medical school
title_full_unstemmed Investigating the drivers for antibiotic use and misuse amongst medical undergraduates–perspectives from a Sri Lankan medical school
title_short Investigating the drivers for antibiotic use and misuse amongst medical undergraduates–perspectives from a Sri Lankan medical school
title_sort investigating the drivers for antibiotic use and misuse amongst medical undergraduates–perspectives from a sri lankan medical school
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10027203/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36963066
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgph.0001740
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