Nepal Anant, Hendrie Delia, Robinson Suzanne, Selvey Linda A
Executive Board, Nepal Karuna Sewa Samaj, Palpa, Nepal
School of Public Health, Curtin University, Perth, Western Australia, Australia.
BMJ Open. 2019 Oct 10;9(10):e032422. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2019-032422.
Private pharmacies are widely established in most low/middle-income countries (LMICs) including Nepal, and are often considered as a patient's first point of contact for seeking healthcare. The aim of this study was to investigate the pattern of antibiotic dispensing in private pharmacies through exit interviews with patients to review their medication information.
Cross-sectional study. Data collection was carried out in 60 days at 33 randomly selected private pharmacies in the Rupandehi district of Nepal.
Patients attending private pharmacies (n=1537).
The pattern of antibiotic prescribing and dispensing was investigated using WHO's core prescribing indicator, '. Frequency distributions were presented based on patients' characteristics, sources of antibiotic, registration status of pharmacies and education of the pharmacist or drug retailer, and disease or condition. χ tests and regression analysis were applied to explore factors associated with the pattern of antibiotic dispensing.
Of patients attending private pharmacies, the proportion receiving at least one antibiotic (38.4%) was above the WHO recommended value (20.0%-26.8%). The most commonly dispensed antibiotics were cefixime (16.9%) and the third-generation cephalosporins (38.0%) class. High dispensing rates of antibiotics for selected conditions (eg, respiratory infections, diarrhoeal cases) appeared contrary to international recommendations. The percentage of antibiotic dispensed was highest for patients who obtained their medicines from unlicensed pharmacies (59.1%). Young people were more likely to receive antibiotics than other age groups.
The antibiotic dispensing pattern from private pharmacies in Nepal was high compared with WHO guidelines, suggesting initiatives to reduce inappropriate use of antibiotics should be implemented. The findings of this study may be generalisable to other LMICs in order to assist in developing policies and guidelines to promote more appropriate dispensing and prescribing practices of antibiotics and limit the spread of antibiotic resistance.
在包括尼泊尔在内的大多数低收入/中等收入国家(LMICs),私立药店广泛分布,通常被视为患者寻求医疗保健的第一接触点。本研究的目的是通过对患者进行出院访谈以审查其用药信息,调查私立药店抗生素配药模式。
横断面研究。在尼泊尔鲁潘德希区33家随机选取的私立药店进行了60天的数据收集。
前往私立药店的患者(n = 1537)。
使用世界卫生组织的核心处方指标调查抗生素处方和配药模式。根据患者特征、抗生素来源、药店注册状态以及药剂师或药品零售商的教育程度和疾病或病情呈现频率分布。应用χ检验和回归分析来探索与抗生素配药模式相关的因素。
在前往私立药店的患者中,接受至少一种抗生素的比例(38.4%)高于世界卫生组织推荐值(20.0% - 26.8%)。最常配出的抗生素是头孢克肟(16.9%)和第三代头孢菌素类(38.0%)。针对特定病症(如呼吸道感染、腹泻病例)的抗生素高配药率似乎与国际建议相悖。从未经许可药店购药的患者抗生素配出百分比最高(59.1%)。年轻人比其他年龄组更有可能接受抗生素治疗。
与世界卫生组织指南相比,尼泊尔私立药店的抗生素配药模式较高,这表明应采取举措减少抗生素的不当使用。本研究结果可能适用于其他低收入/中等收入国家,以协助制定政策和指南,促进抗生素更合理的配药和处方做法,并限制抗生素耐药性的传播。