Antibiotic resistance: what are the opportunities for primary care in alleviating the crisis?

•Preventing patients from developing an acute respiratory infection will obviate any need for antibiotic use downstream. Hygiene measures (such as physical barriers and hand hygiene), and possibly vaccination and exercise, may be effective for preventing some acute respiratory infections. •Patients...

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Main Authors: Malene Plejdrup Hansen, Tammy C Hoffmann, Amanda R McCullough, Mieke L Van Driel, Chris B Del Mar
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2015-02-01
Series:Frontiers in Public Health
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpubh.2015.00035/full
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spelling doaj-37992193f27c46249b535162a3fc05e72020-11-25T00:45:36ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Public Health2296-25652015-02-01310.3389/fpubh.2015.00035124823Antibiotic resistance: what are the opportunities for primary care in alleviating the crisis?Malene Plejdrup Hansen0Tammy C Hoffmann1Amanda R McCullough2Mieke L Van Driel3Chris B Del Mar4Bond UniversityBond UniversityBond UniversityDiscipline of General Practice, Schoole of medicine, University of QueenslandBond University•Preventing patients from developing an acute respiratory infection will obviate any need for antibiotic use downstream. Hygiene measures (such as physical barriers and hand hygiene), and possibly vaccination and exercise, may be effective for preventing some acute respiratory infections. •Patients overestimate the effectiveness of antibiotics: therefore public campaigns might contribute to minimise misconceptions.•Complementary and alternative medicines (e.g. zinc, caffeine, vitamin C, probiotics and Echinacea) are often proposed for preventing and treating acute respiratory infections, but evidence for efficacy is scarce.•General practitioners’ attitudes towards antibiotic prescribing are a major factor in the prescribing for acute respiratory infections. Professional interventions with educational components are effective, although they have modest effects, and are expensive. •General practitioners’ perceptions – that mistakenly assume as a default that patients want antibiotics for their acute respiratory infections – are often wrong. Shared decision making might be a solution, as it enables clinician and patient to participate jointly in making a health decision, having discussed the options together with the evidence for their harms as well as benefits.•General practitioners’ diagnostic uncertainty – often leading to an antibiotic prescription ‘just in case’ – might be addressed by exploiting strategies such as safety-netting, e.g. establishing with the patient a priori clearly defined actions to take if the course of the illness deviates from the expected.However, there is scant research undertaken in this area and evaluation of this strategy and its effects on patient care is needed.•The best strategies for the future are likely to focus on the best combination of the most effective interventions rather than any single one.http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpubh.2015.00035/fullBehaviorPrescriptionsSteroidsantibiotic resistancePrimary Careprobiotic
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Malene Plejdrup Hansen
Tammy C Hoffmann
Amanda R McCullough
Mieke L Van Driel
Chris B Del Mar
spellingShingle Malene Plejdrup Hansen
Tammy C Hoffmann
Amanda R McCullough
Mieke L Van Driel
Chris B Del Mar
Antibiotic resistance: what are the opportunities for primary care in alleviating the crisis?
Frontiers in Public Health
Behavior
Prescriptions
Steroids
antibiotic resistance
Primary Care
probiotic
author_facet Malene Plejdrup Hansen
Tammy C Hoffmann
Amanda R McCullough
Mieke L Van Driel
Chris B Del Mar
author_sort Malene Plejdrup Hansen
title Antibiotic resistance: what are the opportunities for primary care in alleviating the crisis?
title_short Antibiotic resistance: what are the opportunities for primary care in alleviating the crisis?
title_full Antibiotic resistance: what are the opportunities for primary care in alleviating the crisis?
title_fullStr Antibiotic resistance: what are the opportunities for primary care in alleviating the crisis?
title_full_unstemmed Antibiotic resistance: what are the opportunities for primary care in alleviating the crisis?
title_sort antibiotic resistance: what are the opportunities for primary care in alleviating the crisis?
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Public Health
issn 2296-2565
publishDate 2015-02-01
description •Preventing patients from developing an acute respiratory infection will obviate any need for antibiotic use downstream. Hygiene measures (such as physical barriers and hand hygiene), and possibly vaccination and exercise, may be effective for preventing some acute respiratory infections. •Patients overestimate the effectiveness of antibiotics: therefore public campaigns might contribute to minimise misconceptions.•Complementary and alternative medicines (e.g. zinc, caffeine, vitamin C, probiotics and Echinacea) are often proposed for preventing and treating acute respiratory infections, but evidence for efficacy is scarce.•General practitioners’ attitudes towards antibiotic prescribing are a major factor in the prescribing for acute respiratory infections. Professional interventions with educational components are effective, although they have modest effects, and are expensive. •General practitioners’ perceptions – that mistakenly assume as a default that patients want antibiotics for their acute respiratory infections – are often wrong. Shared decision making might be a solution, as it enables clinician and patient to participate jointly in making a health decision, having discussed the options together with the evidence for their harms as well as benefits.•General practitioners’ diagnostic uncertainty – often leading to an antibiotic prescription ‘just in case’ – might be addressed by exploiting strategies such as safety-netting, e.g. establishing with the patient a priori clearly defined actions to take if the course of the illness deviates from the expected.However, there is scant research undertaken in this area and evaluation of this strategy and its effects on patient care is needed.•The best strategies for the future are likely to focus on the best combination of the most effective interventions rather than any single one.
topic Behavior
Prescriptions
Steroids
antibiotic resistance
Primary Care
probiotic
url http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpubh.2015.00035/full
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