Barriers of Appropriate Antibiotic Prescription at PHCC in Qatar: Perspective of Physicians and Pharmacists
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Results
2.1. Patient’s Role in Preventing Appropriate Antibiotic (AB) Prescription and Use
2.1.1. Patient’s Pressure to Prescribe AB
“Patients with cough come to the center just for antibiotics. Patient come with sore throat and if there is no antibiotic, there is a lot of work to be done. You need to explain it is viral and you don’t need antibiotics so lot of work… I think the main issue is the patient perception of the whole issue because I have seen many patients who come here and we explain that it is a viral infection which may take 5–7 days sometimes 10 days and try and explain to them whether they understand or not.”
2.1.2. Patient’s Behavior in Regards to AB Use
“They only take half the course and keep the rest for next time when they feel sick. This leads to another problem; that is the duration of the antibiotic. Some people take it only for two days, then they don’t complete the whole course and they keep the rest to use later.”
2.2. Practitioners’ Role in Preventing Appropriate AB Prescription and Use
2.2.1. Physician’s Malpractice in Regard to Prescribing AB
2.2.2. Hard to Clinically Differentiate between Viral and Bacterial Infections; Yet, Not Requesting Microbiological Investigation
“But there are some atypical cases that we need to cautious when diagnosing it as viral URTI and then patient comes twice not resolved and the chest X-Ray shows bilateral pulmonary infiltrates, so we need to be aware of atypical bacterial infections. There are some criteria for bacterial infections and old people with comorbidities, renal impairment, and immunosuppression.”
2.2.3. No Clear Understanding/Following of the Clinical Guidelines
“For example in UTI, we only have nitrofurantoin, what if it doesn’t work? I need to have another choice, and then again we end up prescribing ciprofloxacin or amoxicillin-potassium clavulanate for UTI which can be treated with trimethoprim that is a narrow spectrum AB. So, I think we need to revise the availability of AB and the guidelines for AB prescribing. I had a look at the guidelines a couple of months ago; it’s confusing, it’s huge.”
2.2.4. Limited Physician-Pharmacist and Physician-Patient Communication Related to AB Prescription and Use
“Yes, another issue if we ask the doctor to change AB to a more appropriate one, in this case he may refuse. Sometimes the formula is not accurate (wrong) one doctor wrote Augmentin and cephalosporin. We try to discuss and correct the formula, in this case he accepted and changed it.”
2.3. Organization’s Role in Preventing Appropriate AB Prescription and Use
2.3.1. AB Prescribing Regulations
“We are encouraging patients who have any viral symptoms, they have this concept that they have to see the doctor. Because, we welcome patients; if you got cough and flu the most common presentation, you are the priority, you are the priority, you are the emergency, you need to be seen today.”
2.3.2. Data about AB Resistance Patterns and Availability of Narrow Spectrum Antibiotic
2.3.3. Workload and Restricted Time of Consultation
“We get exhausted, we have 20–30 patients, 5 general patients and 25 URTI, then bringing them in and talking to them, they exhaust us. A nurse goes down to those five patients, which are the actual patients we don’t get that much time and energy to educate them on their chronic conditions and AB.”
“It takes about 5 min and the lab will take about 10–15 min, and the result will come after ½ an hour… So, better to have some mechanism that if you want to confirm your diagnosis. A focal staff nurse has been trained like that and she gets the results and inform doctor and if the patient can wait. That will decrease the burden of AB prescription by at least 15–20%.”
2.3.4. Management Response to Patient’s Complaints and Patients’ Rights
“Some doctor not respond to patient and explain to patient it is viral infection, and no need for Ab, but the patient will complain to administration. System will say that the doctor is making problems with patient/trouble maker. So, power of the patient is stronger than us, the system is not supporting the doctors. So, usually we said why I put myself in trouble, and will write what the patient needs.”
2.3.5. Pharmacists’ Authority Is Limited
3. Discussion
- Physician/Pharmacist background/culture—PHCC employs a myriad of professionals from significantly diverse backgrounds. This is especially true for Physicians. Hence, the different backgrounds contribute to different prescribing practices and decision making.
- Cost- The antibiotics in PHC are currently funded while they are expensive at community pharmacies, so the patients come to PHC center to request their antibiotics at low cost.
- Workload—with the ever-expanding role of Primary Care Family Physicians to provide integrated care services, more and more secondary care-based services are being delivered within the Primary Care setting to improve access to services for patients across the care continuum. This additional workload reduces the time staff can spend on explaining AMR to patients and to avoid antibiotic prescribing.
- Electronic Health Record (Cerner)—Qatar is in a unique position in that all health sectors—hospitals (secondary, tertiary), primary care centers as well as schools (except private health facilities) are all connected electronically providing access to the single patient health record. Although this has significant patient safety advantages, the challenge for staff is the time taken to complete electronic documentation versus patient directed time. This (amongst other factors), reduces the opportunities for physical examination of patients and the time required to explain AMR to patients requesting antibiotics
- Circumventing the system—where a Physician has the time, knowledge and patience to explain the rational for not prescribing a course of antibiotics, if the physician insists on not prescribing antibiotics, the patient will simply leave and re-book another appointment with another physician who will be pressured to prescribe. Such scenarios are common and cause demotivation for staff trying to enforce organizational restrictions on antibiotic prescribing.
- Patient/Public factors—Pressurizing Physicians to prescribe antibiotics to order—patients have significant influence over staff employed from foreign countries who value their employment and cannot afford to have any complaints made against them for refusing a patient request and Lack of patient awareness of AMR and the need for rational antibiotic use.
4. Materials and Methods
4.1. Data Collection
4.2. Qualitative Analysis
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
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Theme | Physicians (%) | Pharmacists (%) |
---|---|---|
Patient’s role in preventing appropriate antibiotic prescription and use | ||
Patient’s pressure to prescribe AB | 100 | 70 |
Patient’s behavior in regards to AB use | 60 | 60 |
Practitioners’ role in preventing appropriate AB prescription and use | ||
Physician’s malpractice in regard to prescribing AB | 75 | 70 |
Hard to clinically differentiate between viral and bacterial infections; yet, not requesting microbiological investigation | 50 | 50 |
No clear understanding/following of the clinical guidelines | 30 | 20 |
Limited physician-pharmacist and physician-patient communication related to AB prescription and use | - | 70 |
Organization’s role in preventing appropriate AB prescription and use | ||
AB prescribing regulations | 75 | 50 |
Data about AB resistance patterns and availability of narrow spectrum antibiotic | 30 | 20 |
Workload and restricted time of consultation | 70 | 40 |
Management response to patient’s complaints and patients’ rights | 30 | 20 |
Pharmacists’ authority is limited | - | 60 |
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Sharaf, N.; Al-Jayyousi, G.F.; Radwan, E.; Shams Eldin, S.M.E.; Hamdani, D.; Al-Katheeri, H.; Elawad, K.; Habib Sair, A. Barriers of Appropriate Antibiotic Prescription at PHCC in Qatar: Perspective of Physicians and Pharmacists. Antibiotics 2021, 10, 317. https://doi.org/10.3390/antibiotics10030317
Sharaf N, Al-Jayyousi GF, Radwan E, Shams Eldin SME, Hamdani D, Al-Katheeri H, Elawad K, Habib Sair A. Barriers of Appropriate Antibiotic Prescription at PHCC in Qatar: Perspective of Physicians and Pharmacists. Antibiotics. 2021; 10(3):317. https://doi.org/10.3390/antibiotics10030317
Chicago/Turabian StyleSharaf, Nahla, Ghadir Fakhri Al-Jayyousi, Eman Radwan, Shimous Mohamed Elamin Shams Eldin, Dhouha Hamdani, Huda Al-Katheeri, Khalid Elawad, and Anjum Habib Sair. 2021. "Barriers of Appropriate Antibiotic Prescription at PHCC in Qatar: Perspective of Physicians and Pharmacists" Antibiotics 10, no. 3: 317. https://doi.org/10.3390/antibiotics10030317
APA StyleSharaf, N., Al-Jayyousi, G. F., Radwan, E., Shams Eldin, S. M. E., Hamdani, D., Al-Katheeri, H., Elawad, K., & Habib Sair, A. (2021). Barriers of Appropriate Antibiotic Prescription at PHCC in Qatar: Perspective of Physicians and Pharmacists. Antibiotics, 10(3), 317. https://doi.org/10.3390/antibiotics10030317