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Antibiotic knowledge, attitudes and practices: new insights from cross-sectional rural health behaviour surveys in low-income and middle-income South-East Asia

INTRODUCTION: Low-income and middle-income countries (LMICs) are crucial in the global response to antimicrobial resistance (AMR), but diverse health systems, healthcare practices and cultural conceptions of medicine can complicate global education and awareness-raising campaigns. Social research ca...

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Autores principales: Haenssgen, Marco J, Charoenboon, Nutcha, Zanello, Giacomo, Mayxay, Mayfong, Reed-Tsochas, Felix, Lubell, Yoel, Wertheim, Heiman, Lienert, Jeffrey, Xayavong, Thipphaphone, Khine Zaw, Yuzana, Thepkhamkong, Amphayvone, Sithongdeng, Nicksan, Khamsoukthavong, Nid, Phanthavong, Chanthasone, Boualaiseng, Somsanith, Vongsavang, Souksakhone, Wibunjak, Kanokporn, Chai-in, Poowadon, Thavethanutthanawin, Patthanan, Althaus, Thomas, Greer, Rachel Claire, Nedsuwan, Supalert, Wangrangsimakul, Tri, Limmathurotsakul, Direk, Elliott, Elizabeth, Ariana, Proochista
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BMJ Publishing Group 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6707701/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31434769
http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2018-028224
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author Haenssgen, Marco J
Charoenboon, Nutcha
Zanello, Giacomo
Mayxay, Mayfong
Reed-Tsochas, Felix
Lubell, Yoel
Wertheim, Heiman
Lienert, Jeffrey
Xayavong, Thipphaphone
Khine Zaw, Yuzana
Thepkhamkong, Amphayvone
Sithongdeng, Nicksan
Khamsoukthavong, Nid
Phanthavong, Chanthasone
Boualaiseng, Somsanith
Vongsavang, Souksakhone
Wibunjak, Kanokporn
Chai-in, Poowadon
Thavethanutthanawin, Patthanan
Althaus, Thomas
Greer, Rachel Claire
Nedsuwan, Supalert
Wangrangsimakul, Tri
Limmathurotsakul, Direk
Elliott, Elizabeth
Ariana, Proochista
author_facet Haenssgen, Marco J
Charoenboon, Nutcha
Zanello, Giacomo
Mayxay, Mayfong
Reed-Tsochas, Felix
Lubell, Yoel
Wertheim, Heiman
Lienert, Jeffrey
Xayavong, Thipphaphone
Khine Zaw, Yuzana
Thepkhamkong, Amphayvone
Sithongdeng, Nicksan
Khamsoukthavong, Nid
Phanthavong, Chanthasone
Boualaiseng, Somsanith
Vongsavang, Souksakhone
Wibunjak, Kanokporn
Chai-in, Poowadon
Thavethanutthanawin, Patthanan
Althaus, Thomas
Greer, Rachel Claire
Nedsuwan, Supalert
Wangrangsimakul, Tri
Limmathurotsakul, Direk
Elliott, Elizabeth
Ariana, Proochista
author_sort Haenssgen, Marco J
collection PubMed
description INTRODUCTION: Low-income and middle-income countries (LMICs) are crucial in the global response to antimicrobial resistance (AMR), but diverse health systems, healthcare practices and cultural conceptions of medicine can complicate global education and awareness-raising campaigns. Social research can help understand LMIC contexts but remains under-represented in AMR research. OBJECTIVE: To (1) Describe antibiotic-related knowledge, attitudes and practices of the general population in two LMICs. (2) Assess the role of antibiotic-related knowledge and attitudes on antibiotic access from different types of healthcare providers. DESIGN: Observational study: cross-sectional rural health behaviour survey, representative of the population level. SETTING: General rural population in Chiang Rai (Thailand) and Salavan (Lao PDR), surveyed between November 2017 and May 2018. PARTICIPANTS: 2141 adult members (≥18 years) of the general rural population, representing 712 000 villagers. OUTCOME MEASURES: Antibiotic-related knowledge, attitudes and practices across sites and healthcare access channels. FINDINGS: Villagers were aware of antibiotics (Chiang Rai: 95.7%; Salavan: 86.4%; p<0.001) and drug resistance (Chiang Rai: 74.8%; Salavan: 62.5%; p<0.001), but the usage of technical concepts for antibiotics was dwarfed by local expressions like ‘anti-inflammatory medicine’ in Chiang Rai (87.6%; 95% CI 84.9% to 90.0%) and ‘ampi’ in Salavan (75.6%; 95% CI 71.4% to 79.4%). Multivariate linear regression suggested that attitudes against over-the-counter antibiotics were linked to 0.12 additional antibiotic use episodes from public healthcare providers in Chiang Rai (95% CI 0.01 to 0.23) and 0.53 in Salavan (95% CI 0.16 to 0.90). CONCLUSIONS: Locally specific conceptions and counterintuitive practices around antimicrobials can complicate AMR communication efforts and entail unforeseen consequences. Overcoming ‘knowledge deficits’ alone will therefore be insufficient for global AMR behaviour change. We call for an expansion of behavioural AMR strategies towards ‘AMR-sensitive interventions’ that address context-specific upstream drivers of antimicrobial use (eg, unemployment insurance) and complement education and awareness campaigns. TRIAL REGISTRATION NUMBER: Clinicaltrials.gov identifier NCT03241316.
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spelling pubmed-67077012019-09-06 Antibiotic knowledge, attitudes and practices: new insights from cross-sectional rural health behaviour surveys in low-income and middle-income South-East Asia Haenssgen, Marco J Charoenboon, Nutcha Zanello, Giacomo Mayxay, Mayfong Reed-Tsochas, Felix Lubell, Yoel Wertheim, Heiman Lienert, Jeffrey Xayavong, Thipphaphone Khine Zaw, Yuzana Thepkhamkong, Amphayvone Sithongdeng, Nicksan Khamsoukthavong, Nid Phanthavong, Chanthasone Boualaiseng, Somsanith Vongsavang, Souksakhone Wibunjak, Kanokporn Chai-in, Poowadon Thavethanutthanawin, Patthanan Althaus, Thomas Greer, Rachel Claire Nedsuwan, Supalert Wangrangsimakul, Tri Limmathurotsakul, Direk Elliott, Elizabeth Ariana, Proochista BMJ Open Global Health INTRODUCTION: Low-income and middle-income countries (LMICs) are crucial in the global response to antimicrobial resistance (AMR), but diverse health systems, healthcare practices and cultural conceptions of medicine can complicate global education and awareness-raising campaigns. Social research can help understand LMIC contexts but remains under-represented in AMR research. OBJECTIVE: To (1) Describe antibiotic-related knowledge, attitudes and practices of the general population in two LMICs. (2) Assess the role of antibiotic-related knowledge and attitudes on antibiotic access from different types of healthcare providers. DESIGN: Observational study: cross-sectional rural health behaviour survey, representative of the population level. SETTING: General rural population in Chiang Rai (Thailand) and Salavan (Lao PDR), surveyed between November 2017 and May 2018. PARTICIPANTS: 2141 adult members (≥18 years) of the general rural population, representing 712 000 villagers. OUTCOME MEASURES: Antibiotic-related knowledge, attitudes and practices across sites and healthcare access channels. FINDINGS: Villagers were aware of antibiotics (Chiang Rai: 95.7%; Salavan: 86.4%; p<0.001) and drug resistance (Chiang Rai: 74.8%; Salavan: 62.5%; p<0.001), but the usage of technical concepts for antibiotics was dwarfed by local expressions like ‘anti-inflammatory medicine’ in Chiang Rai (87.6%; 95% CI 84.9% to 90.0%) and ‘ampi’ in Salavan (75.6%; 95% CI 71.4% to 79.4%). Multivariate linear regression suggested that attitudes against over-the-counter antibiotics were linked to 0.12 additional antibiotic use episodes from public healthcare providers in Chiang Rai (95% CI 0.01 to 0.23) and 0.53 in Salavan (95% CI 0.16 to 0.90). CONCLUSIONS: Locally specific conceptions and counterintuitive practices around antimicrobials can complicate AMR communication efforts and entail unforeseen consequences. Overcoming ‘knowledge deficits’ alone will therefore be insufficient for global AMR behaviour change. We call for an expansion of behavioural AMR strategies towards ‘AMR-sensitive interventions’ that address context-specific upstream drivers of antimicrobial use (eg, unemployment insurance) and complement education and awareness campaigns. TRIAL REGISTRATION NUMBER: Clinicaltrials.gov identifier NCT03241316. BMJ Publishing Group 2019-08-20 /pmc/articles/PMC6707701/ /pubmed/31434769 http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2018-028224 Text en © Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2019. Re-use permitted under CC BY. Published by BMJ. This is an open access article distributed in accordance with the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 Unported (CC BY 4.0) license, which permits others to copy, redistribute, remix, transform and build upon this work for any purpose, provided the original work is properly cited, a link to the licence is given, and indication of whether changes were made. See: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/.
spellingShingle Global Health
Haenssgen, Marco J
Charoenboon, Nutcha
Zanello, Giacomo
Mayxay, Mayfong
Reed-Tsochas, Felix
Lubell, Yoel
Wertheim, Heiman
Lienert, Jeffrey
Xayavong, Thipphaphone
Khine Zaw, Yuzana
Thepkhamkong, Amphayvone
Sithongdeng, Nicksan
Khamsoukthavong, Nid
Phanthavong, Chanthasone
Boualaiseng, Somsanith
Vongsavang, Souksakhone
Wibunjak, Kanokporn
Chai-in, Poowadon
Thavethanutthanawin, Patthanan
Althaus, Thomas
Greer, Rachel Claire
Nedsuwan, Supalert
Wangrangsimakul, Tri
Limmathurotsakul, Direk
Elliott, Elizabeth
Ariana, Proochista
Antibiotic knowledge, attitudes and practices: new insights from cross-sectional rural health behaviour surveys in low-income and middle-income South-East Asia
title Antibiotic knowledge, attitudes and practices: new insights from cross-sectional rural health behaviour surveys in low-income and middle-income South-East Asia
title_full Antibiotic knowledge, attitudes and practices: new insights from cross-sectional rural health behaviour surveys in low-income and middle-income South-East Asia
title_fullStr Antibiotic knowledge, attitudes and practices: new insights from cross-sectional rural health behaviour surveys in low-income and middle-income South-East Asia
title_full_unstemmed Antibiotic knowledge, attitudes and practices: new insights from cross-sectional rural health behaviour surveys in low-income and middle-income South-East Asia
title_short Antibiotic knowledge, attitudes and practices: new insights from cross-sectional rural health behaviour surveys in low-income and middle-income South-East Asia
title_sort antibiotic knowledge, attitudes and practices: new insights from cross-sectional rural health behaviour surveys in low-income and middle-income south-east asia
topic Global Health
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6707701/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31434769
http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2018-028224
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