Knowledge, Attitudes, Perception and Reported Practices of Healthcare Providers on Antibiotic Use and Resistance in Pregnancy, Childbirth and Children under Two in Lao PDR: A Mixed Methods Study
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Results
2.1. Socio-Demographic Characteristics of Participants
2.2. Knowledge of Participants Regarding Antibiotics and Antibiotic Resistance
2.3. Attitudes of Participants towards Antibiotic Use and Resistance
2.4. Reported Practice of Antibiotics Prescribing/Dispensing
2.5. Reported Practice of Antibiotics Prescribing/Dispensing during Pregnancy and Delivery
2.6. Comparison of Participants’ Knowledge and Reported Practice Scores Regarding Antibiotic Use and Resistance in Both Study Districts
2.7. Qualitative Findings
2.7.1. Socio-Demographic Characteristics of Participants
2.7.2. Perceptions of Antibiotics Prescribing
Antibiotics Prescribed during Pregnancy and Delivery
“We prescribe antibiotics for all cases before performing caesarean section, delivery with episiotomy cases, perineal tear or premature rupture of membranes to prevent post-partum infection”(Female MD, 43 years old)
“The main reason that I prescribe antibiotics to pregnant women is to prevent and treat infection in uncomplicated vaginal delivery cases because we are afraid that the delivery room in the hospital is not guaranteed to be sterile”(Male OG, 55 years old)
“In cases of uncomplicated vaginal delivery, during discharge from the hospital I prescribe amoxicillin tablets for 5 days to prevent post-partum infection as I am afraid that the patients did not understand properly about our health education provision regarding personal hygiene to keep their wounds clean”(Female MD, 43 years old)
“In cases of uncomplicated vaginal delivery, I do not prescribe any antibiotics, following the guidelines of the WHO that the use of antibiotics is not recommended for uncomplicated vaginal delivery”(Female MD, 53 years old)
Antibiotics Prescribed for Children under Two Years of Age
“For children under two, I dispense antibiotics in case of respiratory infection such as pharyngitis, tonsillitis, skin infection, leucocytosis, trauma or others”(Male P, 28 years old)
“The majority of children received antibiotics because of diarrhoea, which is a seasonal disease that mostly occurred in summer”(Female N, 50 years old)
2.7.3. Experience with Antibiotic Resistance and Patient–Doctor Interaction and Communication
Experience with Antibiotic Resistance
“I think that antibiotic resistance is a health problem. Sometimes patients self-medicate with antibiotics when they get fever; if they could not recover then they come to see doctors. Since bacteria are resistant to antibiotics, doctors need to prescribe higher doses of antibiotics”(Male P, 29 years old)
“It is not easy to identify if bacteria are resistant or not, because we did not do investigations of drug resistance. However, there was a report about bacteria that caused Typhoid fever were resistant to antibiotics. For other bacteria I had never heard”(Female MD, 50 years old)
Patient–Doctor Interaction and Communication
“If the result of blood test (such as leucocyte count) show bacterial infection we will explain to patients about which kind of antibiotics to be given, what are their properties, how much doses, why we need to use this drug. So we need antibiotic knowledge to explain to patients about the effectiveness of antibiotics, their mechanism of action, how to make patients feel safe on the treatment”(Female OG, 50 years old)
“The majority of patients including pregnant women asked to buy antibiotics when they got flu or cough, as they thought that antibiotics can treat every illness. I thought that patients didn’t know how to use antibiotics for instance when they got sick and went to see doctors, who prescribed antibiotics to them for 5–7 days, but they took only 2–3 days then stopped using the medicines. We need to explain to patients that inappropriate use of antibiotic may cause antibiotic resistance”(Male AP, 44 years old)
“I think that antibiotic use depends on patient’s knowledge. Some patients knew well how to use antibiotic and followed the doctor’s recommendation, but some had difficulty to understand as we have to explain to them many times how to take antibiotic, especially for minority ethnic group”(Male P, 57 years old)
2.7.4. Opinions about Sources of Information and Educational Intervention on Antibiotic Use in Relation to Pregnancy, Childbirth and Children under Two
Sources of Information on Antibiotic Treatment
“The majority of information on antibiotics that I got was based on national treatment guidelines, and the guidelines from WHO”(Female OG, 37 years old)
“I received health information on antibiotic use from doctors who gave lectures based on the guidelines of paediatrics and obstetrics-gynaecology associations”(Male MD, 55 years old)
“It would be good if antibiotic guideline is available, as we can follow the guideline how to treat, no need to ask for help from others, no need to try to get other sources of information on antibiotic use”(Female AP, 43 years old)
“If antibiotic guideline is available it would be able to give correct information to pregnant women to understand better”(Female OG, 37 years old)
“It would be great if continuing professional development is available. In the past, there was no training program regarding antibiotic use. The training on mother and child health education did not focus on antibiotic use, but rather focus on the health care during pregnancy, delivery and postnatal care for mother and child”(Female MD, 53 years old)
Acceptability and Appropriateness of Educational Intervention
“To improve HCPs’ knowledge, we need to attend training with trainers from the Ministry of Health to upgrade our knowledge on antibiotic use and other topics as well”(Male MD, 32 years old)
“It would be better to educate general population or pregnant women regarding antibiotic use in relation to pregnancy, delivery and children under two by using advertising, posters, brochures, then training HCPs”(Male OG, 52 years old)
“I think that we have to add antibiotic training into the learning program in the medical university to have more knowledge about antibiotic use before graduating”(Male AP, 44 years old)
“I request to have posters, magazine, broadcast via radio about antibiotic use in pregnancy, childbirth and children under two or via social media like Facebook”(Female MW, 40 years old)
3. Discussion
4. Materials and Methods
4.1. Study Design
4.2. Study Settings
4.3. Study Population
4.4. Development of Data Collection Tools
4.5. Data Collection
4.6. Data Management and Analysis
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
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Socio-Demographic Characteristics | Total (n = 217) | Feuang (n = 107) | Vangvieng (n = 110) | p Value |
---|---|---|---|---|
n (%) | n (%) | n (%) | ||
Age median (IQR) | 35 (29–49) | 32 (27–45) | 39 (31–50) | 0.001 ** |
Gender | n/s | |||
Male | 67 (31) | 38 (36) | 29 (26) | |
Female | 150 (69) | 69 (64) | 81 (74) | |
HCP types | n/s | |||
Medical doctor/Assistant doctor | 46 (21) | 21 (19) | 25 (23) | |
Midwife/Nurse | 110 (51) | 54 (48) | 56 (51) | |
Pharmacist/Assistant pharmacist | 34 (16) | 18 (17) | 16 (14) | |
Drug seller | 11 (5) | 5 (5) | 6 (5) | |
Other # | 16 (7) | 9 (8) | 7 (6) | |
Practice types | <0.001 * | |||
District hospital | 113 (52) | 42 (39) | 71 (65) | |
Health centre | 88 (41) | 59 (55) | 29 (26) | |
Private pharmacy | 16 (7) | 6 (6) | 10 (9) |
AB Effectiveness and Resistance Variables | Total (n = 217) | Feuang (n = 107) | Vangvieng (n = 110) | p Value |
---|---|---|---|---|
n (%) | n (%) | n (%) | ||
AB are effective against bacterial infections (correct) | 185 (85) | 91 (85) | 94 (85) | n/s |
AB are effective against viral infections (incorrect) | 64 (29) | 28 (26) | 36 (33) | n/s |
Common cold is normally caused by bacteria (incorrect) | 65 (30) | 30 (28) | 35 (32) | n/s |
AB use may cause side effects (correct) | 211 (97) | 101 (94) | 110 (100) | 0.013 * |
Some AB may have teratogenic effect and their use for pregnant women should be carefully considered (correct) | 211 (97) | 103 (96) | 108 (98) | n/s |
AB use can contribute to ABR (correct) | 194 (89) | 91 (85) | 103 (94) | 0.040 * |
Bacteria can become resistant to AB (correct) | 183 (84) | 85 (79) | 98 (89) | n/s |
ABR can spread from animals to humans (correct) | 79 (36) | 42 (39) | 37 (34) | n/s |
Today, ABR is a big problem in your practice # | 173 (80) | 83 (78) | 90 (82) | n/s |
Today, ABR is a big problem in Laos # | 146 (67) | 73 (68) | 73 (66) | n/s |
Today, ABR is a big problem in the world # | 126 (58) | 64 (60) | 62 (56) | n/s |
Statements | Total (n = 217) | Feuang (n = 107) | Vangvieng (n = 110) |
---|---|---|---|
n (%) | n (%) | n (%) | |
I would prescribe/dispense an AB for an adult patient with runny nose, cough or fever to help him/her to get better quickly | |||
Agree | 84 (39) | 39 (36) | 45 (41) |
Disagree | 131 (60) | 68 (64) | 63 (57) |
Don’t know | 2 (1) | 0 (0) | 2 (2) |
I would normally give AB to a child with a common cold | |||
Agree | 59 (27) | 23 (22) | 36 (33) |
Disagree | 156 (72) | 83 (77) | 73 (66) |
Don’t know | 2 (1) | 1 (1) | 1 (1) |
I prefer to store AB at home, just in case I need them | |||
Agree | 63 (29) | 32 (30) | 31 (28) |
Disagree | 154 (71) | 75 (70) | 79 (72) |
Don’t know | 0 (0) | 0 (0) | 0 (0) |
I would use leftover AB for any of my family member | |||
Agree | 28 (13) | 9 (8) | 19 (17) |
Disagree | 189 (87) | 98 (92) | 91 (83) |
Don’t know | 0 (0) | 0 (0) | 0 (0) |
My prescribing practice is not contributing to ABR | |||
Agree | 109 (50) | 55 (52) | 54 (49) |
Disagree | 91 (42) | 41 (38) | 50 (46) |
Don’t know | 17 (8) | 11 (10) | 6 (5) |
Patient non-adherence to the therapy is contributing to ABR | |||
Agree | 201 (93) | 99 (92) | 102 (93) |
Disagree | 14 (6) | 6 (6) | 8 (7) |
Don’t know | 2 (1) | 2 (2) | 0 (0) |
Variables | Total (n = 217) | Feuang (n= 107) | Vangvieng (n = 110) | p Value |
---|---|---|---|---|
n (%) | n (%) | n (%) | ||
Mode of delivery | ||||
Uncomplicated vaginal delivery without episiotomy | 146 (67) | 87 (81) | 59 (54) | 0.001 * |
Uncomplicated vaginal delivery with episiotomy | 206 (95) | 103 (96) | 103 (94) | n/s |
Caesarean section | 210 (97) | 104 (97) | 106 (96) | n/s |
Reasons for AB use | ||||
Prescribed AB due to pressure from patient | 49 (23) | 17 (16) | 32 (29) | 0.003 * |
Follow common practice | 140 (65) | 65 (61) | 75 (68) | n/s |
Concern for infections | 190 (88) | 99 (93) | 91 (83) | 0.029 * |
AB education/information/spectrum AB | ||||
Participated in AB education | 19 (9) | 14 (13) | 5 (5) | 0.023 * |
Provided AB information for patients | 196 (90) | 101 (94) | 95 (86) | n/s |
Prefer broad spectrum over narrow spectrum AB | 61 (28) | 27 (25) | 34 (31) | n/s |
Scores | Total (n = 217) | Feuang (n = 107) | Vangvieng (n = 110) | p Value |
---|---|---|---|---|
n (%) | n (%) | n (%) | ||
Knowledge | n/s | |||
Below average (<=mean) | 79 (36) | 42 (39) | 37 (33.6) | |
Above average (>mean) | 138 (64) | 65 (61) | 73 (66.4) | |
Mean (SD) | 18 (2) | 17 (2) | 18 (2) | |
Min:Max | 10:22 | 10:22 | 14:22 | |
Reported practice | n/s | |||
Below average (<=mean) | 129 (59) | 59 (55) | 70 (64) | |
Above average (>mean) | 88 (41) | 48 (45) | 40 (36) | |
Mean (SD) | 10 (1) | 10 (1) | 10 (1) | |
Min:Max | 5:13 | 6:13 | 5:12 |
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Sychareun, V.; Sihavong, A.; Machowska, A.; Onthongdee, X.; Chaleunvong, K.; Keohavong, B.; Eriksen, J.; Hanson, C.; Vongsouvath, M.; Marrone, G.; et al. Knowledge, Attitudes, Perception and Reported Practices of Healthcare Providers on Antibiotic Use and Resistance in Pregnancy, Childbirth and Children under Two in Lao PDR: A Mixed Methods Study. Antibiotics 2021, 10, 1462. https://doi.org/10.3390/antibiotics10121462
Sychareun V, Sihavong A, Machowska A, Onthongdee X, Chaleunvong K, Keohavong B, Eriksen J, Hanson C, Vongsouvath M, Marrone G, et al. Knowledge, Attitudes, Perception and Reported Practices of Healthcare Providers on Antibiotic Use and Resistance in Pregnancy, Childbirth and Children under Two in Lao PDR: A Mixed Methods Study. Antibiotics. 2021; 10(12):1462. https://doi.org/10.3390/antibiotics10121462
Chicago/Turabian StyleSychareun, Vanphanom, Amphoy Sihavong, Anna Machowska, Xanded Onthongdee, Kongmany Chaleunvong, Bounxou Keohavong, Jaran Eriksen, Claudia Hanson, Manivanh Vongsouvath, Gaetano Marrone, and et al. 2021. "Knowledge, Attitudes, Perception and Reported Practices of Healthcare Providers on Antibiotic Use and Resistance in Pregnancy, Childbirth and Children under Two in Lao PDR: A Mixed Methods Study" Antibiotics 10, no. 12: 1462. https://doi.org/10.3390/antibiotics10121462
APA StyleSychareun, V., Sihavong, A., Machowska, A., Onthongdee, X., Chaleunvong, K., Keohavong, B., Eriksen, J., Hanson, C., Vongsouvath, M., Marrone, G., Brauner, A., Mayxay, M., Kounnavong, S., & Lundborg, C. S. (2021). Knowledge, Attitudes, Perception and Reported Practices of Healthcare Providers on Antibiotic Use and Resistance in Pregnancy, Childbirth and Children under Two in Lao PDR: A Mixed Methods Study. Antibiotics, 10(12), 1462. https://doi.org/10.3390/antibiotics10121462