Self-medication Behavior with antibiotics: a national cross-sectional survey in Sri Lanka

Antibiotic self-medication is common in low- and middle-income countries. This study aimed to evaluate the Sri Lankan public's knowledge about and attitudes toward antibiotic use and self-medication, and factors associated with self-medication. A national cross-sectional, interviewer-administer...

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Veröffentlicht in:Expert review of anti-infective therapy 2021-10, Vol.19 (10), p.1341-1352
Hauptverfasser: Zawahir, Shukry, Lekamwasam, Sarath, Halvorsen, Kjell H., Rose, Grenville, Aslani, Parisa
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Antibiotic self-medication is common in low- and middle-income countries. This study aimed to evaluate the Sri Lankan public's knowledge about and attitudes toward antibiotic use and self-medication, and factors associated with self-medication. A national cross-sectional, interviewer-administered, survey of a random household sample (N = 1100) was conducted. Factor analysis of the attitudinal items was conducted to investigate the factors associated with antibiotic self-medication. A response rate of ninety-one percent (n = 998) responded. Knowledge about antibiotics was poor (mean = 12.5; SD = 3.5; (scale 0-27)). Half had previously used an antibiotic once in the past three months. About 11% (108/998) had self-medicated the last time they took antibiotics; mostly obtained from a pharmacy (82%; 89/108). Three attitudinal factors were obtained, explaining 56.1% of the variance. Respondents were less likely to self-medicate if they did not support ease of access to antibiotics from pharmacies (p
ISSN:1478-7210
1744-8336
1744-8336
DOI:10.1080/14787210.2021.1911647