“If You Do Not Take the Medicine and Complete the Dose…It Could Cause You More Trouble”: Bringing Awareness, Local Knowledge and Experience into Antimicrobial Stewardship in Tanzania
Abstract
:1. Introduction
Level | Human Health Role | Description | Training | Recognition | Ability to Dispense/Sell Antibiotics |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Health institutions: Degree holders and mixed post-secondary qualifications/training/knowledge | Medical Doctor (MD)/Officer | Most MDs are in the district hospitals, with a few in Health Centres. In district and remote rural communities, they treat patients with mild or chronic illnesses and refer those with serious conditions to higher-tier hospitals [34]. | Degree in medicine | Medical Council of Tanganyika | Yes |
Clinical staff (Assistant Medical Officers, Clinical Officers, Assistant Clinical Officers) | Deliver the majority of care at district level and in rural primary health facilities (dispensaries and health centers [34]). | Four to six years of secondary education followed by three to four years of professional training at certificate and diploma levels. | Medical Council of Tanganyika | Yes | |
Nurse (Nursing Officers, Assistant Nursing Officers, Nurse Mid-wives, Public Health Nurse) | Tanzania Nursing and Midwifery Council | Yes | |||
Retail/Market-based providers | Type I drug providers | Sell prescription-only medications (POM), including antibiotics, pharmacy only (PO), and general sale list (GSL), medicines [16]. Must be run by registered pharmacist. | Degree in pharmacy | Pharmacy Council Tanzania, Tanzania Medicines and Medical Devices Authority (TMDA) | Can sell antibiotics with prescription |
Type II drug providers e.g., Accredited Drug Dispensing Outlet (ADDO*) | Can only sell medicines on the GSL (e.g., common painkillers, cold and flu remedies), and some antibiotics with prescription, e.g., amoxicillin capsule/suspension, benzyl-penicillin powder for injections, chloramphenicol eye drops, trimethoprim/sulfamethoxazole suspension, doxycycline capsules/tablets. | Staff required to have 4 years minimum training e.g., pharmaceutical technician or nurse at diploma or certificate level. | Pharmacy Council Tanzania, Tanzania Medicines and Medical Devices Authority (TMDA) | Can sell some antibiotics with prescription | |
General stores/community shop | Sell general supplies plus some over the counter drugs. Do not require registered pharmacist. | No professional certified training | Community-based and government | Cannot legally sell antibiotics | |
Community health providers | Community Health Workers | Health promotion and basic curative and preventative services. Can advise sick people to go to a healthcare facility [35]. | Secondary education and short health training course | Community-based and government | Cannot legally sell antibiotics |
Traditional Healers | Treatment often consists of a combination of ritual and herbal medication, offering extra, specific treatment for protection of body and mind that cannot be treated in hospital. | Through family and peers | Community-based and some are registered with the Traditional and Alternative, Medicine Council. | Cannot legally sell antibiotics |
Level | Animal Health Role | Description | Training | Recognition | Ability to Sell/Dispense Antibiotics |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Health institutions: Degree holders and mixed post-secondary qualifications/training/knowledge | Veterinarian | A person qualified to treat diseased or injured animals. | Degree in veterinary medicine | Veterinary Council of Tanzania | Yes |
Paraveterinarians (including Livestock Field Officers, LFOs) | Work under the supervision of a veterinarian. Provide services ranging from disease surveillance to artificial insemination, animal treatment, vaccinations, and extension services, among others [37]. | Certificate or diploma holders in animal health | Veterinary Council of Tanzania (if registered) | Yes under veterinary supervision | |
Retail/Market-based vendors | Agrovets/livestock medical vendors/veterinary centers | Retail livestock stores supplying basic drugs, animal feed, seed, and fertiliser to farmers. Key source of animal health advice. | Short training course | Veterinary Council of Tanzania (if registered) TMDA & Tanzania Plant Health and Pesticides Authority (TPHPA) | Yes |
Open-market livestock drug vendors (livestock auction) | Street vendors working in informal economy, selling from open air courtyards and streets. | No professional certified training | Community-based | Cannot legally sell antibiotics | |
Community health providers | Community Animal Health Workers | Selected by their communities and trained in the prevention or treatment of a limited range of animal health problems [38]. | Secondary education and short training course | Community-based | Cannot legally sell antibiotics |
Traditional Healers | Treatment often consists of a combination of ritual and herbal medication, offering extra, specific treatment for protection of body and mind that cannot be treated solely through biomedical approaches. | Through family and peers | Community-based | Cannot legally sell antibiotics | |
Expert Farmer | Practices agriculture, often keeping and caring for cattle and poultry for personal use rather than industrial commercial sale. | Through family, peers and LFO | Community-based | Cannot legally sell antibiotics |
2. Methods
2.1. Data Collection—Sites and Participants
2.2. Interview Protocols
2.3. Data Analysis
3. Results
3.1. Motivation and Role in Community Health
“[First], I am happy because we are helping to conserve the environment, keeping [the community] neat and clean because sometimes you might go to some places and find out someone has no toilet, or his toilet is full and overflowing. So, what we do is to educate them on the importance of toilets and how to maintain them and the environment, as well as the importance of washing hands.”—Community Health Worker 4, Mwanza
“…frankly the only thing that makes me happy is because I am volunteering, and people are getting their rights and they go to the hospital without much trouble, but the problem in the work [lack of pay] itself makes me not enjoy working.”—Community Health Worker 5, Kilimanjaro
“What makes me most happy is [when] a person comes in sick […] you ask him how he is doing […] then you see him doing completely well […] I feel completely at peace that what you are doing brings good results even for patients.”—Nurse 1, Mwanza
“I usually tell you for example, if you do not take the medicine and complete the dose… that really causes drug resistance, so you tell them it could cause you more trouble.”—Nurse 2, Mwanza
“…pastoralism is a very valuable thing because now … I have sold one bull… one million and a half. [TSH/$650 USD] I have been able to… buy blocks and now the house is at [has been built to] its lintel. […] Even at the bank you cannot be given [money quickly], but if I sell the cow, which is [to be] consumed by people, maybe five or six hundred [thousand TSH/$250 USD], you are given money the same day. Therefore, you get rid of your problems, the cow is a thing which removes your problems at once.”—Livestock Field Officer, Mwanza
3.2. General Education and Technical Training
“I was trained a bit by a Livestock Officer who gave me a book which explained the way cows should be kept, when to bring in a male for breeding, and what types of grass we should feed them at what time. I once lent [the book] to one of my friends but unfortunately […] my book got lost. There was a diagram with a scale which showed if you want to sell the cows, how much they should weigh for a certain amount of meat. That is what I have forgotten but the rest of the book’s content I can remember.”—Expert Farmer 1, Kilimanjaro
“I: What training do you have as a community-based health worker? R: I don’t have much training. I: Is that just a seminar? R: It’s just a seminar, and there are times when I’m given a seminar, two days we got there at [name of location], but we don’t have much training. I: What did you learn in that two-day seminar? R: We were taught how to visit the public to get their information so that we can bring information to the health facility.”—Community Health Worker 2, Arusha
“I: Have you got any training or report concerning antibiotic drugs becoming resistant? R: Not yet. I: Would you want to get training? R: I would want to get, if it is, or becomes available, I would like to get that training, I would even use it to sensitise the community.”—Community Health Worker 1, Mwanza
3.3. Knowledge and Awareness of Infectious Conditions and AMR
3.3.1. Practical Knowledge of Common Infections
“Now something that causes this stomach disease most of the time [is not] fetching water in the well! Now other time[s] we [ingest] those bacteria in [that] water because we do not boil.”—Community Health Worker 2, Mwanza
“That is why when you get fresh milk, you have to boil it. [A] long time ago people didn’t know that, so they got sick.”—Community Health Worker 1, Mwanza
3.3.2. Knowledge of AMR and Its Drivers
“[Resistance] has been the case with anti-malaria drugs, we started with chloroquine, then came amodiaquine, then... sulfadoxine, now we have ALU [artemether-lumefantrine]. We also had quinine, which is also now only rarely used, so it’s like that, the same thing that happened with malaria can also happen.”—Assistant Medical Officer, Mwanza
“I: Ask him when he mentions current and past medicines, has performance been different? R: Of course, it’s different because the old medicine used to treat it well and it wasn’t a lot of medicine. And… when we are told that this medicine is good for cattle you just take it, so right now we see these drugs are a challenge again because they are so many drugs and we see it even destroying cattle, sheep, goats. The old ones are good because they were few.”—Expert Farmer, Arusha
3.3.3. Actions of Patients
“R: Once they feel unwell they do run to the pharmacies to purchase all sorts of drugs and start using them but once they get better, they will stop or not finish the dose and this contributes to resistance.”—Assistant Clinical Officer 3, Kilimanjaro
“R: I usually tell you [the patient], for example, if you do not take the medicine and complete the dose, that really causes drug resistance. So you tell them [the patient], ‘It could cause you more trouble [later]’.”—Nurse, Mwanza
“R: This is why I said earlier that people are so much used to these medicines. They simply buy and they know how to use them as they normally do. If you tell them: “Use it this way or that way”, they’ll tell you: “Don’t teach me. I will do it myself”. There are those who buy medicine and would like to be told how much cc to administer and some don’t want to know from you, saying that they normally do it by themselves.”—Animal Medical Vendor 2, Arusha
“Education should be provided by traditional healers because they are highly trusted and that is why their rooms are filled with patients as more prioritise going there than coming to the hospital.”—Medical Officer, Mwanza
“So I think education should be provided on the referral system because many referrals to us could be made by the traditional healers, to come to the hospital at early stages of their conditions.”—Medical Officer, Mwanza
3.3.4. Actions of Providers
“R: Antibiotic are the ones that sell the most and are very well known by my customers who are mostly livestock keepers… So, without antibiotics, I will miss a lot of customers.”—Animal Medical Vendor 1, Arusha
“So they switch the prescription, giving the patient a less costly medication, justifying that this is what your money can buy.”—Medical Officer, Mwanza
“Antibiotics which are in use in veterinary medicine are broad spectrum antibiotics, therefore it is easy to find them prescribed for almost every complaint. That is why they are in regular use. I: Are they being overused? R: Yes.”—Animal Health Specialist, Kilimanjaro
3.4. Constraints in Daily Practices
3.4.1. Infrastructure
“I: Okay, how does time limits affect how you interact with patients? R: Time limit in taking patient history? I: Yes. Has it ever happened that you lacked sufficient time to interact effectively? R: Yes, it can happen, especially when we have staff shortage.”—Assistant Clinical Officer 3, Kilimanjaro
3.4.2. Diagnostic Capacity
“R: “First, we don’t have many testing equipment like for urine and stool for UTI and worms, respectively. At the moment we rely on questioning to know what’s wrong with a patient because you can’t tell him/her to go and get the test done, then come and get the medicines. So, our challenges are the testing equipment. There is a scarcity of the most important equipment.”—Assistant Clinical Officer 3, Kilimanjaro
“R: …prescribing and dispensing a wrong drug, simply because you have asked a patient a question and they have answered you in a certain way. It could be a normal cough which could have been settled with a cough syrup.”—Assistant Clinical Officer 3, Kilimanjaro
“I: As a healthcare worker, do you think your personal behaviours can contribute towards the microbial resistance? R: Yes. I: How? R: I need to check and do tests on her in order to know what medicine to prescribe. I: Mmh, okay. R: I tell them, when you are ill, don’t just go to the pharmacy and purchase drugs, come and get checked what is wrong with you and once we prescribe something, make sure you finish the dose.”—Assistant Clinical Officer 3, Kilimanjaro
“If it wasn’t me who was providing treatment previously in that area, I would ask a lot of questions regarding previous medical records. I would like to see them if they are available before I decide on the course of action if the disease is repetitive. If so, we can change the medication.”—Animal Health Specialist, Kilimanjaro
3.4.3. Drug Availability
“I: Do you face any challenges when you go buy the medicines, if so, which ones?... R: The challenge that I normally face is that… there can be a certain medicine that I need depending on a disease and the needs of my customers. I: Yes. R: But when you get to town you might find that the medicine is not available and you may be told to wait until it’s ordered from Nairobi. I: Aha. R: So [I] would just have to come back and abandon the idea, because you cannot wait until it is ordered. I: Okay. R: Yes.”—Animal Medical Vendor 1, Arusha
“I: Okay. Another challenge? I: Yes… the other challenge… it’s transport. I: Yes? R: …sometimes they do not seal the boxes well… so they may arrive with a few broken bottles… That is when you send them using the bus… you must be present so that you seal them… They sometimes arrive with a few broken bottles, for instance, the dip medicine. I: Yes. R: Yes, the dip medicine container breaks a lot. I: I see. R: Yes. Sometimes you’ll see that. I: Yes. R: Once it’s broken, it ends up messing other things that are in the box. So sometimes the buses refuse to take them. I: To take them? R: It’s because once they spill, it’s poisonous. I: I see. R: They’ll tell you to hire a lorry for such medicine.”—Animal Medical Vendor 1, Ngorongoro
R: “Another thing is the lack of drugs… The government says it will bring drugs since the year before last but they don’t bring any, only the verticals which are free like the contraceptives and syringes, but the actual drugs needed are not available.”—Assistant Clinical Officer 3, Kilimanjaro
4. Discussion
5. Study Limitations
6. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Health Provider Type | Number of IDIs—Human | Number of IDIs—Animal | Location |
---|---|---|---|
Providers within health institutions | 1 | 1 | Kilimanjaro |
6 | 1 | Mwanza | |
2 | 1 | Arusha | |
Retail/Market-based Providers | 2 | 1 | Kilimanjaro |
4 | 1 | Mwanza | |
1 | 3 | Arusha | |
Community-Based Health Providers | 3 | 5 | Kilimanjaro |
4 | 6 | Mwanza | |
1 | 1 | Arusha |
Level | Human Health Role | Description |
---|---|---|
Health institutions: Degree holders | Medical Doctor/Officer | Supporting their community to overcome- health problems. Interested in medicine. |
Health institutions: Mixed post-secondary qualifications/training/knowledge | Clinical Staff and Nurses | Supporting their community |
Retail/Market-based providers | Type II Drug Providers—maduka la dawa muhimu/baridi *; ADDO regulated | Livelihood support: many instances of nurses or clinical staff selling medicines to support their own income. Supporting their communities: passionate in helping communities. Interested in medicine. |
Other drug providers –general store, maduka la kawaida, not ADDO regulated | Interested in medicine | |
Community health providers | Traditional Healer | Supporting their communities: knowledge passed through families and in response to the demand for support |
Community Health Worker | Supporting their communities in having healthy lives and accessing their rights |
Level | Animal Health Role | Description |
---|---|---|
Health institutions: Degree holders | Veterinarian | Supporting their community: supporting animal healthcare development, training the next generation of animal health professionals interested in medicine |
Health institutions: Mixed post-secondary qualifications/training/knowledge | Paraveterinarians (includes LFOs) | Supporting their community: caring for their animals Livelihood support: keeping animals healthy enables immediate access to income |
Retail/Market-based providers | Agrovets/livestock medical vendors/veterinary centers/open-market livestock drug vendors | Livelihood support: responding to demand for animal medicines |
Community health providers | Traditional Healer | Supporting their community: considered to be their calling. Desire to continue practice knowledge passed through family heritage. |
Community Animal Health Worker | Supporting their communities: knowledge passed through families and in response to the demand for support | |
Expert Farmer | Livelihood support: liquidity in keeping and selling cattle; manure used to fertilize crops; milk Importance of demonstrating assets |
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Virhia, J.; Gilmour, M.; Russell, C.; Mutua, E.; Nasuwa, F.; Mmbaga, B.T.; Mshana, S.E.; Dunlea, T.; Shirima, G.; Seni, J.; et al. “If You Do Not Take the Medicine and Complete the Dose…It Could Cause You More Trouble”: Bringing Awareness, Local Knowledge and Experience into Antimicrobial Stewardship in Tanzania. Antibiotics 2023, 12, 243. https://doi.org/10.3390/antibiotics12020243
Virhia J, Gilmour M, Russell C, Mutua E, Nasuwa F, Mmbaga BT, Mshana SE, Dunlea T, Shirima G, Seni J, et al. “If You Do Not Take the Medicine and Complete the Dose…It Could Cause You More Trouble”: Bringing Awareness, Local Knowledge and Experience into Antimicrobial Stewardship in Tanzania. Antibiotics. 2023; 12(2):243. https://doi.org/10.3390/antibiotics12020243
Chicago/Turabian StyleVirhia, Jennika, Molly Gilmour, Cairistiona Russell, Edna Mutua, Fortunata Nasuwa, Blandina T. Mmbaga, Stephen E. Mshana, Torre Dunlea, Gabriel Shirima, Jeremiah Seni, and et al. 2023. "“If You Do Not Take the Medicine and Complete the Dose…It Could Cause You More Trouble”: Bringing Awareness, Local Knowledge and Experience into Antimicrobial Stewardship in Tanzania" Antibiotics 12, no. 2: 243. https://doi.org/10.3390/antibiotics12020243
APA StyleVirhia, J., Gilmour, M., Russell, C., Mutua, E., Nasuwa, F., Mmbaga, B. T., Mshana, S. E., Dunlea, T., Shirima, G., Seni, J., Lembo, T., & Davis, A. (2023). “If You Do Not Take the Medicine and Complete the Dose…It Could Cause You More Trouble”: Bringing Awareness, Local Knowledge and Experience into Antimicrobial Stewardship in Tanzania. Antibiotics, 12(2), 243. https://doi.org/10.3390/antibiotics12020243