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Peer-Education as a Tool to Educate on Antibiotics, Resistance and Use in 16–18-Year-Olds: A Feasibility Study

Peer education (PE) interventions may help improve knowledge and appropriate use of antibiotics in young adults. In this feasibility study, health-care students were trained to educate 16–18 years old biology students, who then educated their non-biology peers, using e-Bug antibiotic lessons. Knowle...

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Autores principales: McNulty, Cliodna A. M., Syeda, Rowshonara B., Brown, Carla L., Bennett, C. Verity, Schofield, Behnaz, Allison, David G., Verlander, Neville Q., Francis, Nick
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7235882/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32235427
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/antibiotics9040146
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author McNulty, Cliodna A. M.
Syeda, Rowshonara B.
Brown, Carla L.
Bennett, C. Verity
Schofield, Behnaz
Allison, David G.
Verlander, Neville Q.
Francis, Nick
author_facet McNulty, Cliodna A. M.
Syeda, Rowshonara B.
Brown, Carla L.
Bennett, C. Verity
Schofield, Behnaz
Allison, David G.
Verlander, Neville Q.
Francis, Nick
author_sort McNulty, Cliodna A. M.
collection PubMed
description Peer education (PE) interventions may help improve knowledge and appropriate use of antibiotics in young adults. In this feasibility study, health-care students were trained to educate 16–18 years old biology students, who then educated their non-biology peers, using e-Bug antibiotic lessons. Knowledge was assessed by questionnaires, and antibiotic use by questionnaire, SMS messaging and GP record searches. Five of 17 schools approached participated (3 PE and 2 control (usual lessons)). 59% (10/17) of university students and 28% (15/54) of biology students volunteered as peer-educators. PE was well-received; 30% (38/127) intervention students and 55% (66/120) control students completed all questionnaires. Antibiotic use from GP medical records (54/136, 40% of students’ data available), student SMS (69/136, 51% replied) and questionnaire (109/136, 80% completed) data showed good agreement between GP and SMS (kappa = 0.72), but poor agreement between GP and questionnaires (kappa = 0.06). Median knowledge scores were higher post-intervention, with greater improvement for non-biology students. Delivering and evaluating e-Bug PE is feasible with supportive school staff. Single tiered PE by university students may be easier to regulate and manage due to time constraints on school students. SMS collection of antibiotic data is easier and has similar accuracy to GP data.
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spelling pubmed-72358822020-05-28 Peer-Education as a Tool to Educate on Antibiotics, Resistance and Use in 16–18-Year-Olds: A Feasibility Study McNulty, Cliodna A. M. Syeda, Rowshonara B. Brown, Carla L. Bennett, C. Verity Schofield, Behnaz Allison, David G. Verlander, Neville Q. Francis, Nick Antibiotics (Basel) Article Peer education (PE) interventions may help improve knowledge and appropriate use of antibiotics in young adults. In this feasibility study, health-care students were trained to educate 16–18 years old biology students, who then educated their non-biology peers, using e-Bug antibiotic lessons. Knowledge was assessed by questionnaires, and antibiotic use by questionnaire, SMS messaging and GP record searches. Five of 17 schools approached participated (3 PE and 2 control (usual lessons)). 59% (10/17) of university students and 28% (15/54) of biology students volunteered as peer-educators. PE was well-received; 30% (38/127) intervention students and 55% (66/120) control students completed all questionnaires. Antibiotic use from GP medical records (54/136, 40% of students’ data available), student SMS (69/136, 51% replied) and questionnaire (109/136, 80% completed) data showed good agreement between GP and SMS (kappa = 0.72), but poor agreement between GP and questionnaires (kappa = 0.06). Median knowledge scores were higher post-intervention, with greater improvement for non-biology students. Delivering and evaluating e-Bug PE is feasible with supportive school staff. Single tiered PE by university students may be easier to regulate and manage due to time constraints on school students. SMS collection of antibiotic data is easier and has similar accuracy to GP data. MDPI 2020-03-30 /pmc/articles/PMC7235882/ /pubmed/32235427 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/antibiotics9040146 Text en © 2020 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
McNulty, Cliodna A. M.
Syeda, Rowshonara B.
Brown, Carla L.
Bennett, C. Verity
Schofield, Behnaz
Allison, David G.
Verlander, Neville Q.
Francis, Nick
Peer-Education as a Tool to Educate on Antibiotics, Resistance and Use in 16–18-Year-Olds: A Feasibility Study
title Peer-Education as a Tool to Educate on Antibiotics, Resistance and Use in 16–18-Year-Olds: A Feasibility Study
title_full Peer-Education as a Tool to Educate on Antibiotics, Resistance and Use in 16–18-Year-Olds: A Feasibility Study
title_fullStr Peer-Education as a Tool to Educate on Antibiotics, Resistance and Use in 16–18-Year-Olds: A Feasibility Study
title_full_unstemmed Peer-Education as a Tool to Educate on Antibiotics, Resistance and Use in 16–18-Year-Olds: A Feasibility Study
title_short Peer-Education as a Tool to Educate on Antibiotics, Resistance and Use in 16–18-Year-Olds: A Feasibility Study
title_sort peer-education as a tool to educate on antibiotics, resistance and use in 16–18-year-olds: a feasibility study
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7235882/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32235427
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/antibiotics9040146
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