| Literature DB >> 34055327 |
Susanne Carai1,2, Aigul Kuttumuratova1, Larisa Boderscova3, Henrik Khachatryan4, Ivan Lejnev1, Kubanychbek Monolbaev5, Sami Uka6, Martin W Weber1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The Strategy of the Integrated Management of Childhood Illness (IMCI) was introduced in Central Asia and Europe to address the absence of evidence-based guidelines, the misuse of antibiotics, polypharmacy and over-hospitalization of children. A study carried out in 16 countries analysed the status and strengths of as well as the barriers to IMCI implementation and investigated how different health systems affect the problems IMCI aims to address. Here we present findings in relation to IMCI's effects on the rational use of drugs, particularly the improved rational use of antibiotics in children, the mechanisms through which these were achieved as well as counteracting system factors.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34055327 PMCID: PMC8141328 DOI: 10.7189/jogh.11.04030
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Glob Health ISSN: 2047-2978 Impact factor: 4.413
Key informants´ profile
| Key informants | No. |
|---|---|
| Specialists/Doctors working at referral level | 56 |
| Doctors working at primary care level | 44 |
| Nurses/Feldshers | 29 |
| Ministry of health staff | 32 |
| Staff of international organizations/NGOs | 28 |
| Academia and professional organizations | 31 |
| Total |
Countries reporting the inclusion of IMCI drugs in the National Essential Drug Lists and countries were key informants reported consistent availability of drugs for children
| Reported by # of countries | Albania | Armenia | Azerbaijan | Georgia | Kazakhstan | Kosovo* | Kyrgyzstan | Moldova | Russia | Tajikistan | Turkey | Turkmenistan | Ukraine | Uzbekistan | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Inclusion of IMCI drugs in National Essential Drug list | † | † | † | ‡ | † | † | † | † | † | † | ‡ | † | † | † | |
| IMCI drugs are reportedly available free of charge at all times | ‡ | ‡ | ‡ | ‡ | † | ‡ | † | † | ‡ | ‡ | ‡ | † | ‡ | ‡ |
ICMI – integrated management of childhood illness
*In accordance with the United Nations Security Council resolution 1244 (1999).
†Aspect reported.
‡Aspect not reported.
Reported promotion of rational use of drugs in IMCI-implementing countries in Europe and Central Asia
| Reported by # of countries | Albania | Armenia | Azerbaijan | Georgia | Kazakhstan | Kosovo* | Kyrgyzstan | Moldova | Russia | Tajikistan | Turkey | Turkmenistan | Ukraine | Uzbekistan | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| IMCI promoted the rational use of antibiotics | † | † | † | † | † | † | † | † | † | † | † | † | † | † | |
| IMCI decreased polypharmacy by: | † | † | † | † | † | § | † | † | § | † | § | † | † | † | |
| -Improving prescribing practice through adherence to IMCI algorithm | § | † | § | † | † | † | † | † | § | † | § | † | † | † | |
| -Addressing parents’ expectation through education and counselling | † | † | † | § | † | † | † | † | § | † | § | † | † | † |
ICMI – integrated management of childhood illness
*In accordance with the United Nations Security Council resolution 1244 (1999).
†Aspect reported.
§No information available.
Reported aspects influencing prescription of antibiotics in IMCI implementing countries in Europe and Central Asia
| Reported by # of countries | Albania | Armenia | Azerbaijan | Georgia | Kazakhstan | Kosovo* | Kyrgyzstan | Moldova | Russia | Tajikistan | Turkey | Turkmenistan | Ukraine | Uzbekistan | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Antibiotics can be purchased over the counter | § | ||||||||||||||
| Parents pressure doctors for antibiotics | § | § | |||||||||||||
| Parents bypass primary care | § | § | |||||||||||||
| Pharmaceutical industry influences doctors´ decisions | § | ||||||||||||||
| Doctors prescribe antibiotics to increase revenues | § | § |
ICMI – integrated management of childhood illness
*In accordance with the United Nations Security Council resolution 1244 (1999).
†Aspect reported.
§No information available.
Actions required by different levels to improve rational use of antibiotics in children
| Global | National health systems | Health care facilities (primary and hospitals) | Communities and homes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Expand evidence base on and raise awareness of overuse of antibiotics in children | Ensure adequate salaries and working conditions | Support and enable health workers to adhere to evidence-based treatment guidelines | Patient and parent education on viral and bacterial infections and harms of misuse of antibiotics for the individual child as well as risk of antimicrobial resistance |
| Include antibiotic misuse in children in global action plan to combat antimicrobial resistance | Adopt adequate regulations restricting access to antibiotic and ensure their enforcement | ||
| Enable the development and delivery of reliable and affordable point-of-care tests differentiating between bacterial and viral infections in children | Adopt adequate regulations controlling pharmaceutical industries´ access to health workers to stop influence on prescribing decisions | Improve counselling skills for confronting parents´ expectations | Establishment of behavioural norms banning self-medication with antibiotics |
| Negotiate with manufacturing partners to obtain significant price reductions that facilitate access to these diagnostic tests | Ensure sound pre-service training and on-going medical education | Improving diagnostics: implementation of point of care tests | Establish behavioural norms for allowing children time to recover from self-limiting illness before resorting to antibiotics |
| Review financing schemes for potential incentives for misuse of antibiotics |