Murray Jennifer L, Leung Daniel T, Hanson Olivia R, Ahmed Sharia M, Pavia Andrew T, Khan Ashraful I, Szymczak Julia E, Vaughn Valerie M, Patel Payal K, Biswas Debashish, Watt Melissa H
Department of Population Health Sciences, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, Utah, United States of America.
School of Medicine, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, Utah, United States of America.
PLOS Glob Public Health. 2024 Apr 4;4(4):e0002507. doi: 10.1371/journal.pgph.0002507. eCollection 2024.
Antimicrobial resistance is a global public health crisis. Effective antimicrobial stewardship requires an understanding of the factors and context that contribute to inappropriate use of antimicrobials. The goal of this qualitative systematic review was to synthesize themes across levels of the social ecological framework that drive inappropriate use of antimicrobials in South Asia. In September 2023, we conducted a systematic search using the electronic databases PubMed and Embase. Search terms, identified a priori, were related to research methods, topic, and geographic location. We identified 165 articles from the initial search and 8 upon reference review (n = 173); after removing duplicates and preprints (n = 12) and excluding those that did not meet eligibility criteria (n = 115), 46 articles were included in the review. We assessed methodological quality using the qualitative Critical Appraisal Skills Program checklist. The studies represented 6 countries in South Asia, and included data from patients, health care providers, community members, and policy makers. For each manuscript, we wrote a summary memo to extract the factors that impede antimicrobial stewardship. We coded memos using NVivo software; codes were organized by levels of the social ecological framework. Barriers were identified at multiple levels including the patient (self-treatment with antimicrobials; perceived value of antimicrobials), the provider (antimicrobials as a universal therapy; gaps in knowledge and skills; financial or reputational incentives), the clinical setting (lack of resources; poor regulation of the facility), the community (access to formal health care; informal drug vendors; social norms), and policy (absence of a regulatory framework; poor implementation of existing policies). This study is the first to succinctly identify a range of norms, behaviors, and policy contexts driving inappropriate use of antimicrobials in South Asia, emphasizing the importance of working across multiple sectors to design and implement approaches specific to the region.
抗菌药物耐药性是一场全球公共卫生危机。有效的抗菌药物管理需要了解导致抗菌药物使用不当的因素和背景。这项定性系统评价的目的是综合社会生态框架各层面中促使南亚地区抗菌药物使用不当的主题。2023年9月,我们使用电子数据库PubMed和Embase进行了系统检索。预先确定的检索词与研究方法、主题和地理位置相关。我们从初始检索中识别出165篇文章,参考文献审查中识别出8篇(n = 173);去除重复项和预印本(n = 12)并排除不符合纳入标准的文章(n = 115)后,46篇文章被纳入本评价。我们使用定性批判性评估技能计划清单评估方法学质量。这些研究涵盖了南亚的6个国家,包括来自患者、医疗保健提供者、社区成员和政策制定者的数据。对于每篇手稿,我们撰写了一份总结备忘录以提取阻碍抗菌药物管理的因素。我们使用NVivo软件对手稿进行编码;编码按社会生态框架的层面进行组织。在多个层面发现了障碍,包括患者层面(自行使用抗菌药物;对抗菌药物的认知价值)、提供者层面(将抗菌药物作为通用疗法;知识和技能差距;经济或声誉激励)、临床环境层面(资源匮乏;机构监管不力)、社区层面(获得正规医疗保健的机会;非正式药品供应商;社会规范)以及政策层面(缺乏监管框架;现有政策执行不力)。本研究首次简洁地识别出一系列促使南亚地区抗菌药物使用不当的规范、行为和政策背景,强调了跨多个部门开展工作以设计和实施针对该地区的具体方法的重要性。