Self-Medication Patterns during a Pandemic: A Qualitative Study on Romanian Mothers’ Beliefs toward Self-Treatment of Their Children
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Sampling and Recruitment
2.2. Data Collection
2.3. Data Analysis
3. Results
3.1. The General Impact of Isolation and Quarantine, Family Behavior during COVID-19 Pandemic
There have been problems or there are financial problems because the husband has lost his job. It was a three-month period in which he looked for another job and it was not easy at all. I work in an NGO…that is, throughout this period, the fear of being left without a job has been seen, the fear of being left without an income, there is a great psychological pressure on us.(Patient 11)
We can say that we faced difficulties, but we spend more time together, as a family time. Before the COVID-19 pandemic, my husband wasn’t involved in parenting. I called the doctor; I struggle with all. Now he can see how hard it is to stay at home hour-by-hour and day-by-day with the kids. Now he is involved in parenting: he doesn’t prepare the kid’s meals, but he does the household.(Patient 8)
We started to appreciate more the time spent in nature because when we were free to travel anywhere… I can say I didn’t appreciate so much a ride in the park or… somewhere at… in a plain.(Patient 13)
3.2. SARS-CoV-2 Infection
Panic. Very great panic […] at the time we did the test… Panic because we had my aunt at home, who was old and who was very afraid of being sick. It wasn’t easy at all…it took us a day to get back after the shock (patient 2). It was the unknown who I think marked us all, then a little bit of momentary panic, that we all experienced me my husband and child through the interaction with SARS-CoV-2.(Patient 3)
I was scared when my husband got the virus because he has certain health problems. He had, if I recall correctly, two heart attacks, and I was scared. Fortunately, it evolved very, very well. I mean, he did lose his smell and taste but didn’t have any other symptoms to aggravate his health. After all, it passed smoothly, he didn’t have a serious form of the disease and, as far as I read and understood, people who lose their smell and taste have the light form of the disease compared to the people who start suddenly with fever or…but I’m not sure, no…I just read to be informed but I don’t think anybody knows for sure.(Patient 16)
3.3. Access to the Healthcare System
And I called the doctor and went to her office. Matei was crying very badly, and I didn’t know why he was crying. His belly seemed to be hurting, he seemed to be unable to move.(Patient 1)
I was really in July and August, for vaccines….(Patient 8)
I know my doctor for many years now. I am her patient since I was a student and I allow myself to call or write a message to her even if it’s something mundane, not serious, I mean, I ask for an appointment. I don’t take antibiotics without a prescription just because…if it’s something easy, I ask my mother who used to be a chemist and she can help with, I don’t know, with something simple like a headache, a toothache, something that doesn’t require antibiotics or powerful drugs. I always ask for medical advice when it comes to using drugs..(Patient 8)
3.4. Source of Medical Information
Of course, until we came to talk to doctors, to clarify, we read on the Internet and terrified us, …, so I do not recommend that, rather, you speak to a specialist. And we are trying to refrain from doing so.(Patient 3)
I: Tell me if you you’re interested in certain health conditions or if your child was diagnosed with a simple virus, from where do you get the medical information? P6: On the Internet mostly (Patient6). I: Do you search on certain websites you use? P6: No, no. Just Google search. I also have two Facebook groups where I used to ask some questions when my child was a baby. I: But the information was useful? P6: Yes, it works most of the time.
3.5. Self-Medication of Pediatric Population
Parents’ Attitudes toward Pediatric Self-Medication
Before the pandemic, I would certainly apply a classic treatment when my child was ill, in the sense that I gave him Paracetamol® (paracetamol) because I know that the Paracetamol® (paracetamol) works. I would have waited a day or two, and if I had seen that nothing happens, certainly I would call my family doctor.(Patient 19)
As I always do, I tell them to ask the pediatrician or the GP. In our case, it happened that the GP is also a pediatrician, but the answer is to ask the pediatrician. As far as I’m concerned, I can give some advice from experience regarding food or clothing, but drugs no, because in my case, I wouldn’t medicate as others did, using their dosage or a certain drug even if the disease seems similar. I always ask the doctor first and then I follow his instructions.
I: Have you never interfered with a treatment on your own?
P8: No, no, and it happened with our friends. They have a baby girl, one or two months older than our child, and she had the same disease as our little one, with fever, and a little rash, but I also told them to ask their doctor. I mean, I can tell them what we used for treatment, but it is not recommended, every child is different, the fever can be higher or lower, and his general state can be different. I also told them first to ask the doctor and follow his instructions and I explained the course of the disease, that after the fever, he will have a small rash/bump and that we didn’t use anything to treat it, they healed on their own. My friends were out of town, and I shared that information with them to calm them down, but that was all I said, I don’t give any advice on medicating, I’m not trained in this field.(Patient 8)
For example, when the symptoms start very suddenly. For a runny nose, I don’t think that I must go to the doctor. Well, now it’s a special situation, but I don’t think that I must visit my GP for a runny nose. I take a pill of Paracetamol® (paracetamol) and I monitor my condition; I drink hot tea or something like that and if it gets worse and I don’t feel well, I will assume that it’s something different and I stop my treatment.(Patient 16)
As far as we know, I don’t think he ever had a high fever, past 39 °C, but I know that you treat low fever, 37 °C, 38 °C, with Ibuprofen®(ibuprofen), but if he has a high fever, 39 °C and past, he should be seen by a doctor because high fever can be a symptom for a serious disease that needs antibiotics and using Ibuprofen®(ibuprofen) will just attenuate the symptom but not treat it. So, yes, I think that for a fever of 39 °C, you should at least ask the doctor and confirm the high fever. For a fever of 37 °C, I have Ibuprofen®(ibuprofen) to my little one when he was teething and had passed 36 °C, 37 °C, and 37 °C +, but after I asked the doctor and was told that if he continues to have a fever, when he’s teething, to give him a dosage of 2.5 mL or 5 mL, according to age. He had his first tooth when he has 6 months old, so I gave him a dosage of 2.5 mL. But for high fever, hoe you describe, 39 °C, no, I wouldn’t treat him with Ibuprofen®(ibuprofen) so at least I wouldn’t treat after my own opinion.(Patient 8)
39 °C fever for a child is high. The first step is to lower his fever and for that, you need to use an antipyretic, but you also must ask for medical advice. So yes, I’m thinking that fever of 39 °C for a child is a high fever.(Patient 16)
Before a pandemic, I would use the classical treatment, the one I know my child reacts to, so I would give him Paracetamol® (paracetamol) because I know it has the effect I expect, I would monitor his condition for a day or two and if nothing happens, for sure I would contact my GP, as a first step. After a consult, if the doctor says that is something more serious than she expected, she recommends pulmonology or other specialties, if the case requires. My baby girl is predisposed to bronchiolitis and when she’s sick, it manifests very suddenly, or it used to, lately, we didn’t have any problems of this sort, so I would start with the classical cold treatment, which we give to a ten-year-old child,Paracetamol® (paracetamol) a hot bath.(Patient 19)
The child is under the weight that they give in the leaflet and know that doses are calculated, and then I think it is better to call the doctor and give you advice, to give you precise advice, than to experiment on the child.(Patient 7)
I would recommend them to speak to their family doctor, and if it is not possible or I know… depending on what the value is the fever, give Paracetamol®/Ibuprofen®/(paracetamol/ibuprofen)that’s what I do.(Patient 9)
I would give him treatment for the fever, and if continued after a day, I would call my family doctor.(Patient 16)
I would not administer antibiotic because I know that antibiotic is administered only in certain cases, for certain infections, and I do not agree to administer this to the child without a prescription.(Patient 3)
I don’t use antibiotics without knowing exactly what it is.(Patient 6)
I would certainly not give the child antibiotics, without knowing what it is all about and without a prescription from the doctor, that is, telling me exactly: Administer the antibiotic x in dose d at I don’t know how many hours, that is, I wouldn’t risk, at least at the first child, no.(Patient 8)
I believe so, yes. I think I have experienced a few times the situation where I needed an antibiotic fast, the one that I knew I react to or my child does, and because I didn’t have it at home, I asked a friend for help, a friend who works in a pharmacy or other medical field. And now, for example, with azithromycin, I didn’t find it the first day I needed it, and the next day, when I had the prescription, I took it from the pharmacy I usually buy my pills, near my building. The family pharmacy to say so, where, in time, you create certain connections/bonds.(Patient 19)
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
6. Patents
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Themes | Category | Free Codes |
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I. Factors of self-medication associated with the pandemic | 1. The general impact of isolation and quarantine |
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- | 2. SARS-CoV-2 Infection |
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- | 3. Family behaviors |
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4. Access to the healthcare system |
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5. Source of medical information |
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II. Self-medication of pediatric population |
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Tarciuc, P.; Pleșca, D.A.; Duduciuc, A.; Gimiga, N.; Tătăranu, E.; Herdea, V.; Ion, L.M.; Diaconescu, S. Self-Medication Patterns during a Pandemic: A Qualitative Study on Romanian Mothers’ Beliefs toward Self-Treatment of Their Children. Healthcare 2022, 10, 1602. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare10091602
Tarciuc P, Pleșca DA, Duduciuc A, Gimiga N, Tătăranu E, Herdea V, Ion LM, Diaconescu S. Self-Medication Patterns during a Pandemic: A Qualitative Study on Romanian Mothers’ Beliefs toward Self-Treatment of Their Children. Healthcare. 2022; 10(9):1602. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare10091602
Chicago/Turabian StyleTarciuc, Petruța, Doina Anca Pleșca, Alina Duduciuc, Nicoleta Gimiga, Elena Tătăranu, Valeria Herdea, Laura Mihaela Ion, and Smaranda Diaconescu. 2022. "Self-Medication Patterns during a Pandemic: A Qualitative Study on Romanian Mothers’ Beliefs toward Self-Treatment of Their Children" Healthcare 10, no. 9: 1602. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare10091602
APA StyleTarciuc, P., Pleșca, D. A., Duduciuc, A., Gimiga, N., Tătăranu, E., Herdea, V., Ion, L. M., & Diaconescu, S. (2022). Self-Medication Patterns during a Pandemic: A Qualitative Study on Romanian Mothers’ Beliefs toward Self-Treatment of Their Children. Healthcare, 10(9), 1602. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare10091602