1. The unseen use of antimicrobials: Drivers of human antibiotic use in a community in Thailand and implications for surveillance.
- Author
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Alhusein, Nour, Charoenboon, Nutcha, Wichuwaranan, Kantima, Poonsawad, Kornrawan, Montrivade, Varapon, Avison, Matthew B., Sringernyuang, Luechai, and Lambert, Helen
- Subjects
ANTIBIOTICS ,COMMUNITY health services ,PUBLIC health surveillance ,CROSS-sectional method ,FOCUS groups ,RESEARCH funding ,AUTOMOBILE driving ,ETHNOLOGY research ,PRIVATE sector ,UNCERTAINTY ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,ANTI-infective agents ,PUBLIC health ,HEALTH facilities ,INFLAMMATION - Abstract
We investigated sociocultural and economic drivers of human antimicrobial use (AMU) in Thailand through ethnographic research, interviews, focus groups and a cross-sectional survey. This community-based study generated findings clustered around three key themes: treatment-seeking practices, medicine use, and interpretation of biomedical constructs. Participants sought care from public health facilities for chronic conditions, but medicines from the private sector were considered more powerful and were preferred for acute complaints. Many antibiotics were unrecognised as such by consumers due to the practice at private healthcare facilities of dispensing repackaged medicines without identifying labels. This unseen use of antibiotics is probably driven by economic drivers including market competition in the private sector, policy implementation drivers whereby rational drug use policies mainly target the public sector, behavioural drivers relating to treatment seeking-practices, and sociocultural drivers that influenced participants’ understanding of medical terms and concepts. Participants regarded antibiotics as reducing inflammation and were uncertain about the distinctions between anti-inflammatories, antibiotics, and pain relievers. Antimicrobial Resistance (AMR) was understood as a form of drug tolerance to be remedied by changing the medicine. Community surveys may not provide accurate estimates of AMU where people are unable to distinguish antibiotics reliably from other medicines. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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