了解社区药房的抗生素采购行为:新出现的抗菌药耐药性的潜在驱动因素

IF 1.8 Q3 PHARMACOLOGY & PHARMACY Exploratory research in clinical and social pharmacy Pub Date : 2024-09-01 DOI:10.1016/j.rcsop.2024.100485
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引用次数: 0

摘要

导言抗菌素耐药性(AMR)是一个跨国界的健康问题,严重影响着中低收入国家(LMICs),这些国家 80% 的抗生素在社区使用,其中 20-50% 的抗生素是不适当的。包括孟加拉国在内的东南亚国家由于医疗保健标准不完善和抗生素销售不规范,面临着更高的 AMR 风险。本研究旨在对社区药房的抗生素配药模式进行审计,找出影响购买行为的因素。研究方法在孟加拉国的四个城市和农村地区对 385 名抗生素顾客进行了横断面调查,并对 1000 次药房配药活动进行了结构性观察。描述性分析界定了抗生素的使用情况,泊松回归分析了患者的人口统计学特征和健康症状对处方行为的影响。常见的抗生素包括大环内酯类(22.8%)、第三代头孢菌素类(20.8%)和第二代头孢菌素类(16.9%)。根据世界卫生组织-世界卫生大会(WHO-AWaRe)的分类,73.5%的抗生素被归类为 Watch 类,23.1%被归类为 Access 类。调查显示,56.6%的抗生素是在没有处方的情况下从药贩和非正规医疗机构购买的,主要用于治疗 "非严重 "健康症状,如上呼吸道感染(37.4%)、发烧(31.7%)、无并发症皮肤感染(20%)、胃肠道感染(11.2%)和泌尿道感染(7.9%)。与≤5 岁或≥60 岁的人相比,6-59 岁的人在购买抗生素时出示处方的可能性要低 27%。下呼吸道感染和肠道热的处方率较高,调整后的流行率分别为 1.78(95% CI:1.04, 3.03)和 1.87(95% CI:1.07, 3.29)。在对混杂因素进行调整后,性别、城市-农村地区、收入、教育程度和健康症状数量对处方可能性无显著影响。社区药房的便利性和利益冲突阻碍了只凭处方的法规的执行。未来的策略应考虑在缺乏明确权力以确保最佳合规性的情况下,监管如何影响药剂人员的经济利益。
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Understanding antibiotic purchasing practices in community pharmacies: A potential driver of emerging antimicrobial resistance

Introduction

Antimicrobial resistance (AMR), a transboundary health issue, critically impacting low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) where 80% of antibiotics are used in the community, with 20–50% being inappropriate. Southeast-Asia, including Bangladesh, faces heightened AMR risk due to suboptimal healthcare standard and unregulated antibiotic sales. This study aimed to audit antibiotic dispensing patterns from community pharmacies, identifying factors influencing purchasing behaviors.

Methods

A cross-sectional survey of 385 antibiotic customers and structured observations of 1000 pharmacy dispensing events were conducted in four urban and rural areas in Bangladesh. Descriptive analysis defined antibiotic use, while Poisson regression examined how patients' demographics and health symptoms influenced prescription behaviors.

Results

Among 1000 observed medicine dispensing events, 25.9% were antibiotics. Commonly purchased antibiotics included macrolides (22.8%), third-generation-cephalosporins (20.8%), and second-generation-cephalosporins (16.9%). Following WHO-AWaRe classifications, 73.5% of antibiotics were categorized as Watch, and 23.1% as Access. From the survey, 56.6% antibiotics were purchased without a prescription from drug-sellers and informal healthcare providers, primarily for “non-severe” health-symptoms such as upper-respiratory-tract infections (37.4%), fever (31.7%), uncomplicated skin infections (20%), gastrointestinal-infections (11.2%), and urinary-tract infections (7.9%). The likelihood of presenting a prescription while purchasing antibiotics was 27% lower for individuals aged 6–59 compared to those ≤5 or ≥ 60. Lower-respiratory-tract infections and enteric-fever had higher prescription rates, with adjusted prevalence ratios of 1.78 (95% CI: 1.04, 3.03) and 1.87 (95% CI: 1.07, 3.29), respectively. After adjusting for confounders, sex, urban-rural locations, income, education, and number of health-symptoms exhibited no significant influence on prescription likelihood.

Conclusion

This study underscores unregulated antibiotic sales without prescriptions, urging tailored interventions considering prevailing health-seeking practices in diverse healthcare settings in LMICs. Enforcing prescription-only regulations is hindered by easy access through community pharmacies and conflicts of interest. Future strategies should consider how stewardship impacts the financial interests of pharmacy personnel in settings lacking clear authority to ensure optimal compliance.

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