Understanding Internal and External Drivers Influencing the Prescribing Behaviour of Informal Healthcare Providers with Emphasis on Antibiotics in Rural India: A Qualitative Study
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Results
2.1. Internal Drivers
2.1.1. Theme 1—IHCPs’ Accelerated Therapeutic Interactions with Ready Supply Antibiotics Allowed Them to Surpass Academic Credentials
‘Like we are practicing and government try to stop us from practicing. Government officials come to the village. So villagers meet head-on with them. They will not let us stop practicing as long as the government doesn’t appoint good doctors or open a government hospital in the village. Also, said that these people will work for us until and unless the government makes other arrangements’.(Focus Group Discussion (FGD-4); Male 4)
‘Patient came at night and obviously, he cannot go to town at that hour so we give him primary treatment like paracetamol for fever and antibiotics for the night and tell him to go to the paediatrician in the morning’.(FGD-3; Male 3)
‘We write 3 days antibiotic dose properly. Actually, in rural areas, it should be at least 5–7 days dose. If we prescribe for complete 7 days, he will find it costly and so he will not take the dose’.(FGD-2; Female 3)
2.1.2. Theme 2—Beliefs Regarding Antibiotics as a Quick Fix and First Choice in ‘Hit-and-Try’ Prescriptions Increase Antibiotic Use
‘Antibiotic is a sure-shot drug. It can cure any disease. Any kind of disease, the patient doesn’t get well without antibiotics. Even if fever is there antibiotic is compulsory, for cough and a cold antibiotic is compulsory, for wounds antibiotic is compulsory, any infection of the body, immunity is enhanced by antibiotics, it is necessary for any disease’.(FGD-4; Male 4)
‘I mean it boosts up the body, other drugs start working in the body. They are not effective if antibiotics aren’t given. If antibiotics are not included in the treatment it takes a very long time to get better and many a time there is no effect at all’.(FGD-5; Male 4)
‘Knowledge also and they also want fast results. Like they are giving a combination of 2 antibiotics, whether it is needed or not, so accordingly he is adding and giving believing that the patient will get well fast. The patient might not get cured by giving only cefixime, so cloxacillin in combination is given or something else and he thinks that patient will get fine because cases of resistance are also coming as patients are not taking full dose’.(FGD-4; Male 4)
‘Also happens when the provider is having competition and do not want to lose his patients to another provider thinking that if the single antibiotic prescribed did not affect and the patient does not get better soon he will go to another provider and so they prescribe more than one antibiotic’.(FGD-7; Male 1)
‘Prescription of antibiotics, we do it from our experience like if the patient has a fever, in a normal way we give simple medicines many times, the fever didn’t subside then second-time small antibiotic is given, Amoxicillin, MOX syrup with the fever and so we got the result. Madam, we learnt with our experience that in fever if one antibiotic is given with antipyretic then the body will get relief faster. Yes, experience teaches everything, we keep track that this was the condition, and for this condition, this medicine was better’.(FGD-6; Male 3)
‘They get treatment of cough cold in the village for 2 days, but they will take treatment for only 1 day, we explain them properly, that it is very necessary to take antibiotics for 3 days and sometimes for 5 days if needed if you don’t take the complete course resistance will develop and it will stop acting on you’.(FGD-5; Male 4)
‘We are not educated in medicine; it is possible that we could be the reason for the resistance’.(FGD-4; Male 6)
2.2. External Drivers
2.2.1. Theme 3—Mutually Beneficial Relationship between Informal and Formal Healthcare Providers Led to Available Antibiotics
‘According to my experience, the tiny beings which we can’t see from our naked eyes, they are bacteria. The ones which are tinier than bacteria, they are viruses which are dead when outside and when they reach inside the body they become alive’.(FGD-6; Male 2)
‘I worked at the medical retail counter for 11 years so I have the knowledge of medicines and from time to time we get training from the civil hospital, welfare society, Pushpa Mission Hospital, etc. Apart from this whenever needed we take advice from child specialists’.(FGD-3; Male 4)
‘Madam, this we have learned during ‘Jan sawasthya rakshak’ (Community Health Visitor) training. Also, doctors give lectures to us and tell us to come to see patients, make groups of five, and take one group every day. To study what he had diagnosed and written on a treatment pad. You have to stand there and observe’.(FGD-2; Male 1)
2.2.2. Theme 4—Patients Thought That Antibiotics Were Effective and Often Demanded Them, Leading to Prescriptions
‘In village what happens, labour class are there, they don’t have time, they come in a hurry that they have to go back for their work, for labour work, the kid should be alright instantly; if he doesn’t get relief in next 2 h, they will come to me, we both are from the same village, if I am unable to give relief, they will go to him; if he is not able to provide the relief, they will go to someone else. But the kid should get relief in 1 h. Take treatment here for one day, if it gets alright, then it is ok; otherwise, we have to go to Ujjain or show to the big doctor. In such situations, we are also not able to make a decision that what type of medicine should be given’.(FGD-2; Female 5)
‘They purchase from medical, by directly saying give us cefixime, give us monoxil, amoxicillin. Just like zandu balm (Ayurvedic ointment for pain relief), the head is aching so give us zandu balm. They take antibiotics like that which they have learned from medical stores. If anybody goes to the store and tell them their symptoms, the medical storekeeper will make a complete dose for them and give and tell them that this is antibiotic, this is for fever, and this is for cough cold, so this is how they learn’.(FGD-4; Male 4)
3. Discussion
3.1. IHCPs Sociodemographic Characteristics, Awareness, Knowledge, and Misconceptions Regarding Antibiotic Use
3.2. Influence of the Formal Healthcare Providers
3.3. Methodological Considerations
4. Materials and Methods
4.1. Study Setting
4.2. Study Design and Participants
4.3. Data Collection
4.4. Data Analysis
5. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Abbreviations
WHO | World Health Organisation |
IHCPs | Informal Healthcare Providers |
UHC | Universal Health Coverage |
U-5 | Under-Five |
KAP | Knowledge, Attitude and Practices |
FGD | Focus Group Discussions |
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Variables | Frequency, n |
---|---|
Age (years) | |
19–28 | 1 |
29–38 | 7 |
39–48 | 37 |
49–58 | 2 |
59–68 | 1 |
Gender | |
Male | 43 |
Female | 5 |
Education | |
Secondary education (10thgrade) | 14 |
Senior secondary education (11th–12th grade) | 16 |
Higher education(BA/BSc/BCom) * | 18 |
Experience as informal healthcare provider (years) | |
1–10 | 6 |
11–20 | 36 |
21–30 | 5 |
31–40 | 1 |
Responses (Meaning Units) | Codes | Categories | Themes |
---|---|---|---|
| IHCPs have support from villagers which gives them the confidence to practice. | Perception of informal healthcare providers | IHCPs’ accelerated therapeutic interactions with readily available antibiotics allowed them to surpass academic credentials. |
| IHCPs are available in the village and are available with medicines such as antibiotics, paracetamol, etc. during the wee hours. | IHCPs are approached for the treatment, as they are available for 24 h | |
| Patients ask for the treatment for which they can pay or for half of the treatment and so prescribe accordingly. | The financial condition of the caregiver affects the treatment prescribing behaviour of IHCPs | |
| Antibiotics boost the immune system of the body; viral will not get covered without antibiotics. | Knowledge of informal healthcare providers about antibiotic use | Beliefs regarding antibiotics as a quick fix and first choice in ‘hit-and-try’ prescriptions increase antibiotic use. |
| Improves the efficiency of other drugs when given along with them. | IHCPs consider antibiotics as the mandatory part of the treatment | |
| Selection of antibiotics for an illness is based on ‘hit-and-trial’ method and learning with experience. | Antibiotics prescribing practice of IHCPs | |
| Gain knowledge about different treatments by assisting other formal practitioners and attending training sessions held by medical institutions. | Learning by observing and attending treatment training sessions | Mutually beneficial relationships between informal and formal healthcare providers led to available antibiotics. |
| Caregivers put pressure for quick relief. | Barriers in providing appropriate treatment | Patients thought that antibiotics were effective and often demanded them, leading to prescriptions. |
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Khare, S.; Pathak, A.; Stålsby Lundborg, C.; Diwan, V.; Atkins, S. Understanding Internal and External Drivers Influencing the Prescribing Behaviour of Informal Healthcare Providers with Emphasis on Antibiotics in Rural India: A Qualitative Study. Antibiotics 2022, 11, 459. https://doi.org/10.3390/antibiotics11040459
Khare S, Pathak A, Stålsby Lundborg C, Diwan V, Atkins S. Understanding Internal and External Drivers Influencing the Prescribing Behaviour of Informal Healthcare Providers with Emphasis on Antibiotics in Rural India: A Qualitative Study. Antibiotics. 2022; 11(4):459. https://doi.org/10.3390/antibiotics11040459
Chicago/Turabian StyleKhare, Shweta, Ashish Pathak, Cecilia Stålsby Lundborg, Vishal Diwan, and Salla Atkins. 2022. "Understanding Internal and External Drivers Influencing the Prescribing Behaviour of Informal Healthcare Providers with Emphasis on Antibiotics in Rural India: A Qualitative Study" Antibiotics 11, no. 4: 459. https://doi.org/10.3390/antibiotics11040459
APA StyleKhare, S., Pathak, A., Stålsby Lundborg, C., Diwan, V., & Atkins, S. (2022). Understanding Internal and External Drivers Influencing the Prescribing Behaviour of Informal Healthcare Providers with Emphasis on Antibiotics in Rural India: A Qualitative Study. Antibiotics, 11(4), 459. https://doi.org/10.3390/antibiotics11040459