Misprescription of antibiotics in primary care: a critical systematic review of its determinants
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Identificadores
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Fecha de publicación
2012-04Título de revista
Journal of Evaluation in Clinical Practice
Tipo de contenido
Artigo
DeCS
prescripción inadecuada | médicos de atención primaria | humanos | antibacterianos | farmacorresistencia bacterianaMeSH
Inappropriate Prescribing | Drug Resistance, Bacterial | Humans | Physicians, Primary Care | Anti-Bacterial AgentsResumen
Background Antibiotic resistance is one of the principal public health problems
worldwide. Currently, inappropriate use of antibiotics is regarded as the principal determinant
of resistance, with most of these drugs being prescribed outside a hospital setting.
This systematic review sought to identify the factors, attitudes and knowledge linked to
misprescription of antibiotics.
Methods A systematic review was conducted using the MEDLINE-PubMed and
EMBASE databases. The selection criteria required that papers: (1) be published in
English or Spanish; (2) designate their objective as that of addressing attitudes/
knowledge or other factors related with the prescribing of antibiotics; and (3) use quality
and/or quantity indicators to define misprescription. The following were excluded: any
paper that used qualitative methodology and any paper that included descriptive analysis
only.
Results A total of 46 papers that met the inclusion criteria were included in the review.
They were very heterogeneous and displayed major methodological limitations. Doctors’
socio-demographic and personal factors did not appear to exert much influence. Complacency
(fulfilling what professionals perceived as being patients’/parents’ expectations) and,
to a lesser extent, fear (fear of possible complications in the patient) were the attitudes
associated with misprescription of antibiotics.
Conclusions Before designing interventions aimed at improving the prescription and
use of antibiotics, studies are needed to identify precisely which factors influence
prescribing.