Paediatricians' knowledge, perceptions, preparedness and involvement towards paediatric antimicrobial stewardship in Pakistan: findings and the implications.

IF 3.7 Q2 INFECTIOUS DISEASES JAC-Antimicrobial Resistance Pub Date : 2024-12-09 eCollection Date: 2024-12-01 DOI:10.1093/jacamr/dlae193
Zia Ul Mustafa, Amer Hayat Khan, Muhammad Salman, Sabariah Noor Harun, Johanna C Meyer, Brian Godman
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Abstract

Introduction: Antibiotics are frequently prescribed for neonates and children. However, this can be excessive with inappropriate prescribing leading to increased antimicrobial resistance (AMR). Paediatricians are key initiators of antibiotics. Consequently, their awareness, perceptions, readiness and potential barriers towards hospital-based antimicrobial stewardship programmes are of considerable importance, especially in Pakistan with high rates of AMR.

Materials and methods: A web-based cross-sectional survey among paediatricians from June to August 2023 using a validated questionnaire. Paediatricians from all four Provinces and the capital territory of Pakistan were invited from randomly selected public and private sector hospitals.

Results: 383 paediatricians participated (79.8% response rate). Most were male (87.7%), aged 35 years or less (55.4%), working in tertiary care hospitals (68.4%) and undertaking 51-100 child consultations every day (45%). Only 15% reported obtaining training on antibiotic usage, AMR and/or antimicrobial stewardship. Only 7.6% confirmed functional antimicrobial stewardship programmes in their institutions. Most had adequate knowledge of antibiotic use and AMR. However, key issues were not fully understood with only 27.4% believing antibiotics were being overused among children. Paediatricians with less experience, and who undertook fewer consultations per day, had significantly lower knowledge scores. Most participants were prepared to initiate antimicrobial stewardship programmes; however, perceived barriers included a lack of online learning sources, treatment guidelines and support from hospital administration.

Discussion: Paediatricians had appropriate knowledge about antibiotic use and AMR although concerns with antibiotic use. Important barriers to integrating antimicrobial stewardship programmes were identified, which need addressing for these to become routine.

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巴基斯坦儿科医生对儿科抗菌药物管理的知识、认知、准备和参与:调查结果及其影响
简介:抗生素经常被开给新生儿和儿童。然而,这可能是过度的,不适当的处方导致抗菌素耐药性(AMR)增加。儿科医生是抗生素的主要发起者。因此,他们对以医院为基础的抗菌素管理方案的认识、认知、准备程度和潜在障碍非常重要,特别是在抗菌素耐药性高的巴基斯坦。材料和方法:对2023年6月至8月的儿科医生进行了一项基于网络的横断面调查,使用了一份有效的问卷。从随机选择的公立和私营医院邀请了巴基斯坦所有四个省和首都地区的儿科医生。结果:383名儿科医生参与调查,有效率79.8%。大多数是男性(87.7%),年龄在35岁或以下(55.4%),在三级保健医院工作(68.4%),每天进行51-100次儿童咨询(45%)。只有15%的人报告获得了抗生素使用、抗菌素耐药性和/或抗菌素管理方面的培训。只有7.6%的人确认其机构有功能性抗菌药物管理规划。大多数人对抗生素使用和抗菌素耐药性有足够的了解。然而,关键问题并没有完全了解,只有27.4%的人认为抗生素在儿童中被过度使用。经验较少、每天就诊较少的儿科医生的知识得分明显较低。大多数与会者准备启动抗菌素管理规划;然而,人们认为的障碍包括缺乏在线学习资源、治疗指南和医院管理部门的支持。讨论:儿科医生对抗生素使用和抗菌素耐药性有适当的了解,尽管对抗生素使用有顾虑。确定了整合抗微生物药物管理规划的重要障碍,需要解决这些障碍,使其成为常规。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
5.30
自引率
0.00%
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0
审稿时长
16 weeks
期刊最新文献
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