Factors influencing inappropriate use of antibiotics in outpatient and community settings in China: a mixed-methods systematic review

Background For decades, antibiotics have been excessively consumed around the world, contributing to increased antimicrobial resistance (AMR) and negatively impacting health outcomes and expenditures. Antibiotic use in China accounts for half of worldwide antibiotic consumption, which mainly takes p...

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Main Authors: Stephan Harbarth, Xudong Zhou, Leesa Lin, Tingting Yao, Ruyu Sun
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMJ Publishing Group 2020-11-01
Series:BMJ Global Health
Online Access:https://gh.bmj.com/content/5/11/e003599.full
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spelling doaj-81e4bdf9b8154225908559a55179da462021-01-21T21:30:09ZengBMJ Publishing GroupBMJ Global Health2059-79082020-11-0151110.1136/bmjgh-2020-003599Factors influencing inappropriate use of antibiotics in outpatient and community settings in China: a mixed-methods systematic reviewStephan Harbarth0Xudong Zhou1Leesa Lin2Tingting Yao3Ruyu Sun4Infection Prevention and Control Division, University Hospitals Geneva, Geneve, SwitzerlandSchool of Medicine, Zhejiang University, Hangzhou, ChinaPublic Health, Environments and Society, London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, London, UKInstitute for Health & Aging, University of California, San Francisco, San Francisco, California, USAInstitute of Social Medicine, School of Medicine, Zhejiang University, Hangzhou, ChinaBackground For decades, antibiotics have been excessively consumed around the world, contributing to increased antimicrobial resistance (AMR) and negatively impacting health outcomes and expenditures. Antibiotic use in China accounts for half of worldwide antibiotic consumption, which mainly takes place in outpatient and community settings, and often unnecessarily for self-limiting community-acquired infections. This study aimed to identify and assess factors of inappropriate use of antibiotics in the Chinese context to inform the development of interventions to mitigate inappropriate consumption in the absence of clinical indications.Methods We conducted a mixed-methods systematic review and included empirical studies with original data conducted in mainland China, Hong Kong and Taiwan that investigated factors of antibiotic use in the community including outpatient care among patients, caregivers and prescribers. We searched MEDLINE, EMBASE, the Cochrane Library, PsycINFO, Google Scholar and one Chinese database CNKI (China Knowledge Resource Integrated Database), using a combination of the key terms ‘antibiotic’, ‘antimicrobial’, ‘use’, ‘consumption’, ‘behaviour’, ‘prescribe’ and related syntax for all peer-reviewed publications published before June 2020. Health Belief Model was employed for data synthesis.Findings Fifty-four studies were included in the full-text review: 44 quantitative, 5 qualitative and 5 mixed-methods studies. Despite a high AMR awareness, public perception/misconception of antibiotic efficacy and easy access to antibiotics for self-limiting conditions drive inappropriate demand and use in the community including primary care setting. Providers’ prescribing behaviours are influenced by financial incentives, lack of diagnostic capacity and concerns over complications.Conclusions Inappropriate outpatient and community antibiotic use is influenced by non-biomedical factors at the individual, community, health system and societal levels in mainland China, contributing to a high antibiotic use rate. This study calls for context-tailored One Health interventions, restrictive antibiotic drug policy and multifaceted antibiotic stewardship programmes that simultaneously address drivers of inappropriate use from both the supply-side and demand-side within and beyond clinical settings.PROSPERO registration number CRD42019139591.https://gh.bmj.com/content/5/11/e003599.full
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Stephan Harbarth
Xudong Zhou
Leesa Lin
Tingting Yao
Ruyu Sun
spellingShingle Stephan Harbarth
Xudong Zhou
Leesa Lin
Tingting Yao
Ruyu Sun
Factors influencing inappropriate use of antibiotics in outpatient and community settings in China: a mixed-methods systematic review
BMJ Global Health
author_facet Stephan Harbarth
Xudong Zhou
Leesa Lin
Tingting Yao
Ruyu Sun
author_sort Stephan Harbarth
title Factors influencing inappropriate use of antibiotics in outpatient and community settings in China: a mixed-methods systematic review
title_short Factors influencing inappropriate use of antibiotics in outpatient and community settings in China: a mixed-methods systematic review
title_full Factors influencing inappropriate use of antibiotics in outpatient and community settings in China: a mixed-methods systematic review
title_fullStr Factors influencing inappropriate use of antibiotics in outpatient and community settings in China: a mixed-methods systematic review
title_full_unstemmed Factors influencing inappropriate use of antibiotics in outpatient and community settings in China: a mixed-methods systematic review
title_sort factors influencing inappropriate use of antibiotics in outpatient and community settings in china: a mixed-methods systematic review
publisher BMJ Publishing Group
series BMJ Global Health
issn 2059-7908
publishDate 2020-11-01
description Background For decades, antibiotics have been excessively consumed around the world, contributing to increased antimicrobial resistance (AMR) and negatively impacting health outcomes and expenditures. Antibiotic use in China accounts for half of worldwide antibiotic consumption, which mainly takes place in outpatient and community settings, and often unnecessarily for self-limiting community-acquired infections. This study aimed to identify and assess factors of inappropriate use of antibiotics in the Chinese context to inform the development of interventions to mitigate inappropriate consumption in the absence of clinical indications.Methods We conducted a mixed-methods systematic review and included empirical studies with original data conducted in mainland China, Hong Kong and Taiwan that investigated factors of antibiotic use in the community including outpatient care among patients, caregivers and prescribers. We searched MEDLINE, EMBASE, the Cochrane Library, PsycINFO, Google Scholar and one Chinese database CNKI (China Knowledge Resource Integrated Database), using a combination of the key terms ‘antibiotic’, ‘antimicrobial’, ‘use’, ‘consumption’, ‘behaviour’, ‘prescribe’ and related syntax for all peer-reviewed publications published before June 2020. Health Belief Model was employed for data synthesis.Findings Fifty-four studies were included in the full-text review: 44 quantitative, 5 qualitative and 5 mixed-methods studies. Despite a high AMR awareness, public perception/misconception of antibiotic efficacy and easy access to antibiotics for self-limiting conditions drive inappropriate demand and use in the community including primary care setting. Providers’ prescribing behaviours are influenced by financial incentives, lack of diagnostic capacity and concerns over complications.Conclusions Inappropriate outpatient and community antibiotic use is influenced by non-biomedical factors at the individual, community, health system and societal levels in mainland China, contributing to a high antibiotic use rate. This study calls for context-tailored One Health interventions, restrictive antibiotic drug policy and multifaceted antibiotic stewardship programmes that simultaneously address drivers of inappropriate use from both the supply-side and demand-side within and beyond clinical settings.PROSPERO registration number CRD42019139591.
url https://gh.bmj.com/content/5/11/e003599.full
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