| Literature DB >> 28515903 |
James A Ayukekbong1,2, Michel Ntemgwa3, Andrew N Atabe4.
Abstract
The causes of antimicrobial resistance (AMR) in developing countries are complex and may be rooted in practices of health care professionals and patients' behavior towards the use of antimicrobials as well as supply chains of antimicrobials in the population. Some of these factors may include inappropriate prescription practices, inadequate patient education, limited diagnostic facilities, unauthorized sale of antimicrobials, lack of appropriate functioning drug regulatory mechanisms, and non-human use of antimicrobials such as in animal production. Considering that these factors in developing countries may vary from those in developed countries, intervention efforts in developing countries need to address the context and focus on the root causes specific to this part of the world. Here, we describe these health-seeking behaviors that lead to the threat of AMR and healthcare practices that drive the development of AMR in developing countries and we discuss alternatives for disease prevention as well as other treatment options worth exploring.Entities:
Keywords: Antimicrobial therapy; Developing countries; Microorganisms; Resistance
Year: 2017 PMID: 28515903 PMCID: PMC5433038 DOI: 10.1186/s13756-017-0208-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Antimicrob Resist Infect Control ISSN: 2047-2994 Impact factor: 4.887
Factors and stakeholders contributing to the problem of antimicrobial resistance
| Factors | Contribution | Example |
|---|---|---|
| Poor drug quality | Sales of counterfeit, adulterated and poor quality antibiotics | These poor quality antibiotics can produce sub-inhibitory concentration in vivo, which increases the selection of resistant strains |
| Regulators | While most developed countries have developed AMR action plans, this is still lacking in many developing countries especially in Africa | Most countries lack the resources to enforce policies regarding the manufacture and distribution of sub-standard drugs |
| Prescribers | Excessive clinical use and misuse is partially responsible for increase rate of resistance | Variation in prescription practice among health care provider. Sometimes there is prescription of a wrong drug, wrong doses, or antimicrobial not necessary at all |
| Dispensers | Drug vendors usually have little or no knowledge of the required dosage regimen, indication, or contraindications | Medications are usually purchased in small aliquots from roadside stall and storage and distribution is usually done under inadequate conditions |
| Users (patients) | High rate of self- medication and lack of treatment compliance | Patients fail to adhere to dosage regimens and discontinue treatment when symptoms subside before pathogen is eliminated |
| Animal industry | The use of antimicrobial drugs in agriculture or industrial settings, exerts a selection pressure which can favor the survival of resistant strains (or genes) over susceptible ones, leading to a relative increase in resistant bacteria within microbial communities | Resistant bacteria in animals can be transferred to humans through the consumption of food or through direct contact with food-producing animals or through environmental spread |
Strategies to contain and minimize the development of antimicrobial resistance
| Control strategies | Contribution |
|---|---|
| Hygiene and sanitation | Improving basic hygiene and sanitation will reduce the spread of resistant organisms |
| Vaccination | Vaccination may reduce severity of disease, provide protection against shedding of pathogens and even raise the threshold load of pathogens required for infection |
| Alternative therapies | The reluctance of pharmaceutical companies to invest in research and development of novel antimicrobial agents necessitate the exploration of alternative therapies such as bacteriophage, probiotics and Quorum Sensing inhibitors |
| Education | Health care providers, dispensers and patients need to be educated on how the use and misuse of antimicrobial may contribute to the development of resistance |
| Infection prevention & control | Proper hospital infection control may prevent the spread of nosocomial pathogens and resistant microbes that may have easily been disseminated to the community if these measure were not in place |