| Literature DB >> 16732892 |
Abstract
BACKGROUND: World-wide concern about increasing antibiotic resistance has focused attention on strategies to improve antibiotic use. This research adapted Australian best-practice guidelines on the prophylactic use of antibiotics in surgery to a Beijing teaching hospital and then used them as a quality assessment and improvement tool, supplemented by educational interventions. Qualitative data about factors influencing antibiotic use was also obtained.Entities:
Year: 2006 PMID: 16732892 PMCID: PMC1524787 DOI: 10.1186/1743-8462-3-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Aust New Zealand Health Policy ISSN: 1743-8462
Factors influencing antibiotic use in China
| Factor | Influence |
| Government policy | By poorly remunerating doctors and expecting hospitals to support themselves largely through the sale of drugs, government policy encouraged over-prescribing of expensive drugs and discouraged quality assessment and improvement exercises. |
| Pharmaceutical industry | By spending a large amount of money on drug advertising, gifts and financial "kick-backs" to doctors who prescribed their drugs drug companies encouraged excessive prescribing ("kick-backs" were particularly attractive given the low salary of hospital doctors). |
| Hospital Drug and Therapeutics Committees | Generally regarded as ineffective; in particular they provided no monitoring of prescriptions and little independent education to medical staff. |
| Surgeons attitude and knowledge | By being less interested in drugs than physicians ("operations were more important") misunderstandings were perpetuated such as, "new antibiotics are stronger"; "new drugs kill most germs"; "the bigger the operation, the greater the need for newer and stronger antibiotics". |
| Deteriorating relationship between doctors and patients | This led to doctors protecting themselves from being sued by prescribing unnecessary &/or expensive drugs; this practice was often acerbated by media reports of patients physically assaulting the medical staff &/or extorting money from hospitals when treatment failed. |