Understanding Antibiotic Use in Minya District, Egypt: Physician and Pharmacist Prescribing and the Factors Influencing Their Practices

Kathleen Dooling(Centers for Disease Control and Prevention), Amr Kandeel(Ministry of Health and Population), Lauri A. Hicks(Centers for Disease Control and Prevention), Waleed El‐Shoubary(Naval Medical Research Unit EURAFCENT), Khaled Fawzi(Ministry of Health and Population), Yasser Kandeel(Ministry of Health and Population), Ahmad Etman(Ministry of Health and Population), Anna‐Leena Lohiniva(Naval Medical Research Unit EURAFCENT), Maha Talaat(Naval Medical Research Unit EURAFCENT)
Antibiotics
June 20, 2014
Cited by 81Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

Overuse of antibiotics has contributed to the emergence of antibiotic-resistant bacteria globally. In Egypt, patients can purchase antibiotics without a prescription, and we hypothesized frequent inappropriate antibiotic prescribing and dispensing. We interviewed physicians (n = 236) and pharmacists (n = 483) and conducted focus groups in Minya, Egypt, to assess attitudes and practices regarding antibiotic prescribing for outpatient acute respiratory infections (ARI). Antibiotics were reportedly prescribed most of the time or sometimes for colds by 150 (64%) physicians and 326 (81%) pharmacists. The most commonly prescribed antibiotics were β-lactams. Macrolides were the second most commonly prescribed for colds and sinusitis. The prescription of more than one antibiotic to treat pneumonia was reported by 85% of physicians. Most respondents thought antibiotic overuse contributes to resistance and reported "patient self-medication" as the biggest driver of overuse. Fifty physicians (21%) reported that they had prescribed antibiotics unnecessarily, citing patient over-the-counter access as the reason. Physicians <40 years of age and those who treat adults were more likely to prescribe antibiotics for colds. Overall, we found a high rate of unwarranted outpatient antibiotic prescribing and dispensing for ARIs. Patient access to OTC antibiotics contributes to over-prescribing. National guidelines for ARI treatment, provider education and national policy requiring a physician's prescription for antibiotics may improve appropriate antibiotic use in Egypt.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis