An educational intervention to promote appropriate antibiotic use for acute respiratory infections in a district in Egypt- pilot study

Abstract Background Antibiotic overuse is the most important modifiable factor contributing to antibiotic resistance. We conducted an educational campaign in Minya, Egypt targeting prescribers and the public through communications focused on appropriate antibiotic use for acute respiratory infection...

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Main Authors: Amr Kandeel, Danielle L. Palms, Salma Afifi, Yasser Kandeel, Ahmed Etman, Lauri A. Hicks, Maha Talaat
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2019-05-01
Series:BMC Public Health
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12889-019-6779-0
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spelling doaj-50ba1b7346304f5a803460724aacd5002020-11-25T02:55:17ZengBMCBMC Public Health1471-24582019-05-0119S311010.1186/s12889-019-6779-0An educational intervention to promote appropriate antibiotic use for acute respiratory infections in a district in Egypt- pilot studyAmr Kandeel0Danielle L. Palms1Salma Afifi2Yasser Kandeel3Ahmed Etman4Lauri A. Hicks5Maha Talaat6Ministry of HealthCenters for Disease Control and PreventionGlobal Disease Detection Center, US CDCMinistry of HealthMinistry of HealthCenters for Disease Control and PreventionGlobal Disease Detection Center, US CDCAbstract Background Antibiotic overuse is the most important modifiable factor contributing to antibiotic resistance. We conducted an educational campaign in Minya, Egypt targeting prescribers and the public through communications focused on appropriate antibiotic use for acute respiratory infections (ARIs). Methods The entire population of Minya was targeted by the campaign. Physicians and pharmacists were invited to participate in the pre-intervention assessments. Acute care hospitals and a sample of primary healthcare centers in Minya were randomly selected for a pre-intervention survey and all patients exiting outpatient clinics on the day of the survey were invited to participate. The same survey methodology was conducted for the post-intervention assessments. Descriptive comparisons were made through three assessments conducted pre- and post-intervention. We quantitated antibiotic prescribing through a survey administered to patients with an ARI exiting outpatient clinics. Additionally, physicians, pharmacists, and patients were interviewed regarding their attitudes and beliefs towards antibiotic prescribing. Finally, physicians were tested on three clinical scenarios (cold, bronchitis, and sinusitis) to measure their knowledge on antibiotic use. Results Post-intervention patient exit surveys revealed a 23.1% decrease in antibiotic prescribing for ARIs in this population (83.7 to 64.4%) and physicians and pharmacists self-reported less frequently prescribing antibiotics for ARIs on their follow-up surveys. We also found an increase in correct responses to the clinical scenarios and in attitude and belief scores for physicians, pharmacists, and patients regarding antibiotic use in the post-intervention sample. Conclusions Overall, the samples surveyed after the community-based educational campaign reported a lower frequency of antibiotic prescribing and improved knowledge and attitudes regarding antibiotic misuse compared to the samples surveyed before the campaign. Ongoing interventions educating providers and patients are needed to decrease antibiotic misuse and reduce the spread of antibiotic resistance in Egypt.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12889-019-6779-0AntibioticsAcute respiratory infectionColdBronchitisSinusitisEgypt
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Amr Kandeel
Danielle L. Palms
Salma Afifi
Yasser Kandeel
Ahmed Etman
Lauri A. Hicks
Maha Talaat
spellingShingle Amr Kandeel
Danielle L. Palms
Salma Afifi
Yasser Kandeel
Ahmed Etman
Lauri A. Hicks
Maha Talaat
An educational intervention to promote appropriate antibiotic use for acute respiratory infections in a district in Egypt- pilot study
BMC Public Health
Antibiotics
Acute respiratory infection
Cold
Bronchitis
Sinusitis
Egypt
author_facet Amr Kandeel
Danielle L. Palms
Salma Afifi
Yasser Kandeel
Ahmed Etman
Lauri A. Hicks
Maha Talaat
author_sort Amr Kandeel
title An educational intervention to promote appropriate antibiotic use for acute respiratory infections in a district in Egypt- pilot study
title_short An educational intervention to promote appropriate antibiotic use for acute respiratory infections in a district in Egypt- pilot study
title_full An educational intervention to promote appropriate antibiotic use for acute respiratory infections in a district in Egypt- pilot study
title_fullStr An educational intervention to promote appropriate antibiotic use for acute respiratory infections in a district in Egypt- pilot study
title_full_unstemmed An educational intervention to promote appropriate antibiotic use for acute respiratory infections in a district in Egypt- pilot study
title_sort educational intervention to promote appropriate antibiotic use for acute respiratory infections in a district in egypt- pilot study
publisher BMC
series BMC Public Health
issn 1471-2458
publishDate 2019-05-01
description Abstract Background Antibiotic overuse is the most important modifiable factor contributing to antibiotic resistance. We conducted an educational campaign in Minya, Egypt targeting prescribers and the public through communications focused on appropriate antibiotic use for acute respiratory infections (ARIs). Methods The entire population of Minya was targeted by the campaign. Physicians and pharmacists were invited to participate in the pre-intervention assessments. Acute care hospitals and a sample of primary healthcare centers in Minya were randomly selected for a pre-intervention survey and all patients exiting outpatient clinics on the day of the survey were invited to participate. The same survey methodology was conducted for the post-intervention assessments. Descriptive comparisons were made through three assessments conducted pre- and post-intervention. We quantitated antibiotic prescribing through a survey administered to patients with an ARI exiting outpatient clinics. Additionally, physicians, pharmacists, and patients were interviewed regarding their attitudes and beliefs towards antibiotic prescribing. Finally, physicians were tested on three clinical scenarios (cold, bronchitis, and sinusitis) to measure their knowledge on antibiotic use. Results Post-intervention patient exit surveys revealed a 23.1% decrease in antibiotic prescribing for ARIs in this population (83.7 to 64.4%) and physicians and pharmacists self-reported less frequently prescribing antibiotics for ARIs on their follow-up surveys. We also found an increase in correct responses to the clinical scenarios and in attitude and belief scores for physicians, pharmacists, and patients regarding antibiotic use in the post-intervention sample. Conclusions Overall, the samples surveyed after the community-based educational campaign reported a lower frequency of antibiotic prescribing and improved knowledge and attitudes regarding antibiotic misuse compared to the samples surveyed before the campaign. Ongoing interventions educating providers and patients are needed to decrease antibiotic misuse and reduce the spread of antibiotic resistance in Egypt.
topic Antibiotics
Acute respiratory infection
Cold
Bronchitis
Sinusitis
Egypt
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12889-019-6779-0
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