| Literature DB >> 27761263 |
Gemma L Buckland Merrett1, Gerald Bloom2, Annie Wilkinson2, Hayley MacGregor2.
Abstract
The emergence and spread of antibiotic resistant pathogens poses a big challenge to policy-makers, who need to oversee the transformation of health systems that evolved to provide easy access to these drugs into ones that encourage appropriate use of antimicrobials, whilst reducing the risk of resistance. This is a particular challenge for low and middle-income countries with pluralistic health systems where antibiotics are available in a number of different markets. This review paper considers access and use of antibiotics in these countries from a complex adaptive system perspective. It highlights the main areas of intervention that could provide the key to addressing the sustainable long term use and availability of antibiotics. A focus on the synergies between interventions addressing access strategies, antibiotic quality, diagnostics for low-resource settings, measures to encourage just and sustainable decision making and help seeking optimal therapeutic and dosing strategies are key levers for the sustainable future of antibiotic use. Successful integration of such strategies will be dependent on effective governance mechanisms, effective partnerships and coalition building and accurate evaluation systems at national, regional and global levels.Entities:
Keywords: Antibiotic/antimicrobial resistance; Equity; Justice; Pluralism; Sustainability; Systems
Year: 2016 PMID: 27761263 PMCID: PMC5055727 DOI: 10.1186/s40545-016-0083-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Pharm Policy Pract ISSN: 2052-3211
Fig. 1A complex system: human drivers of antibiotic resistance in pluralistic health systems
Variables to explore for sustainable future access and appropriate use interventions
| Theme | Rationale | Variables to explore for intervention |
|---|---|---|
| Access strategies | How should antibiotics be made available to all members of a community? | Roll out options, referral patterns, training community health workers to prescribe appropriately, exclusive vendor availability |
| Antibiotic quality | Measures to ensure antibiotic quality | Roles of different actors, effective technologies for low resource settings, drivers of quality |
| Decision making and help seeking (unlocking capabilities) | Strategies to enable people to treat infections when necessary while reducing risks of resistance | Suppliers of advice and drugs, role of financial incentives, assessment of risk and need, professional and social norms, understandings of disease and antibiotics, ideas of entitlement, design of packaging |
| Therapeutic and dosing strategies | Optimising drug use strategies based on the scientific, economic, social and epidemiological context | Explore antibiotic combinations, co-administration, co-formulation, cycling, best practice for frequency and adherence to dosing strategies |
| Use of diagnostics | How can diagnostics improve diagnosis and treatment and be relevant in low resource settings | Dual diagnosis of infection and resistance in low resource settings, meeting the needs of populations, integration with surveillance, effects on access to care, treatment-seeking behaviour or supply stock-outs, prescription/antibiotic use |
| Exploring integration of new strategies | Transmission of health behaviour messaging integration of appropriate use measures into everyday practices. Explore innovative ways of tracking, diagnosis, treatment, reporting, messaging and the surveillance of resistance and antibiotic use | How can mobile health technology be incorporated to improve diagnosis, treatment and surveillance; can social media be used to encourage appropriate use of new/existing therapies; role of pharmaceutical companies and appropriate use |
| The role of markets and market actors | Effective strategies for involving players at every level in the market (local, national, regional, international) and aligning incentives | Roles/responsibilities for information transmission, guideline adherence, positive incentive creation, measures to improve access and reduce resistance |
| Consensus and coalition building | Building (and negotiating) shared visions of just and sustainable use | Mapping competing understandings and interests of relevant organisations and associations; Building of coalitions for change |
| Governance | Effective mechanisms at the community and regional level for ensuring sustainable access and use of antibiotics | Agreed roles and responsibilities, effective funding streams, harmonisation where possible |
| Evaluation of systems | Observe impact of interventions | Other health consequences, clinical outcomes of AMR, resistance in the environment, health seeking behaviour and wider social consequences (economic, networks) |
| Identify unintended consequences |