| Literature DB >> 22085536 |
Coralith García1, Liz P Llamocca, Krystel García, Aimee Jiménez, Frine Samalvides, Eduardo Gotuzzo, Jan Jacobs.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Misuse of antimicrobials (AMs) and antimicrobial resistance (AMR) are global concerns. The present study evaluated knowledge, attitudes and practices about AMR and AM prescribing among medical doctors in two large public hospitals in Lima, Peru, a middle-income country.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2011 PMID: 22085536 PMCID: PMC3231801 DOI: 10.1186/1472-6904-11-18
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Clin Pharmacol ISSN: 1472-6904
Knowledge, attitudes and practices (KAP)-surveys about AMR in the hospital setting as reported in the English literature
| Author | Country | Participants | Main findings |
|---|---|---|---|
| Pulcini | Scotland, France | Junior doctors | 95% agreed AMR is a national problem, 63% agreed so for their own clinical practice. Only 26% knew the correct local prevalence of methicillin-resistant |
| Guerra | Brazil | Mainly residents | 95% agreed AMR is a problem and 87% that AMs are overprescribed |
| Giblin | USA | Health care workers | 95% agreed that AMR is a national problem, 65% agreed for in their own practice |
| Srinisavan | USA | House-staff physicians (other than paediatricians) (n = 179) | 88% agreed that AMs are overused in general, 72% agreed so for their own hospital |
| Wester | USA | Internal medicine doctors | 87% considered AMR as very important national problem |
AMR: antimicrobial resistance AM: antimicrobial
* 33% of participants were physicians
Professional profile of the participants in the two hospitals of Lima, Peru
| Characteristic | Cayetano Heredia hospital (n = 132) | Arzobispo Loayza Hospital (n = 124) | Total |
|---|---|---|---|
| 0 - 4 years | 74 (56) | 66 (53) | 140 (55) |
| ≥ 5 years | 58 (44) | 58 (47) | 116 (45) |
| Hospital department | |||
| Medicine | 66 (50.0) | 76 (61) | 142 (55) |
| Surgery | 39 (30)* | 14 (11)* | 53 (21) |
| O&B | 15 (11) | 17 (14) | 32 (13) |
| Paediatrics | 12 (9) | 17 (14) | 29 (11) |
| Position | |||
| Resident (in training) | 64 (48) | 71 (57) | 135 (53) |
| Attending physician | 68 (52) | 53 (43) | 121 (47) |
Data represent numbers (%).
*p < 0.05 O&B: Obstetrics and Gynaecology
Figure 1Awareness of the scope of AMR among 256 participants (data in the graphs represent percentages). AM: Antimicrobial, AMR: Antimicrobial resistance
Figure 2Perception of factors influencing the decision on AM prescription. Data represent percentages among 256 participants. AM: Antimicrobial
Figure 3Acceptability and appropriateness of potential interventions on AM prescribing as surveyed among 256 participants. Data represent percentages. AM: antimicrobial, AMR: Antimicrobial resistance, *38% answered 'There is no a restrictive policy in my hospital'