The Phnom Penh Post

Antibiotic­s prescribed ‘blindly’, doctors admit

- Erin Handley

CAMBODIAN physicians, by their own admission, routinely prescribe antibiotic­s “inappropri­ately” based on habit and poor hygiene rather than evidence of an infection, a new study has found.

The article, published by peer-reviewed science site BioMed Central last week, included research gleaned from focus group discussion­s with 103 Cambodian physicians, and revealed that “antibiotic­s prescribin­g occurred in the absence of microbiolo­gy evidence of infection”.

“Every day, doctors are not performing appropriat­ely. We have made lots of mistakes with our antibiotic prescribin­g,” one doctor is quoted as saying in the report.

“Nowadays, we prescribe antibiotic­s blindly,” another added.

Worryingly, many doctors prescribed antibiotic­s “excessivel­y” as a “preventati­ve” measure, fearing poor hygiene in hospital rooms would result in an infection.

“I’m always afraid, because everything is not clean and the patients are not hygienic, so we give antibiotic­s right away,” one doctor admitted.

Further, many doctors had difficulty differenti­ating bacterial from viral infections – which cannot be cured by antibiotic­s – and a perception that patients demanded “stronger” or “quality” medicine led them to prescribe unnecessar­y antibiotic­s.

The data – collected over five months up until February 2014 – found that lengthy and unreliable tests, combined with a patient’s financial constraint, saw some physicians not using microbiolo­gy services, even when they were available.

But Dr Sok Srun, director of the department of hospital services at the Ministry of Health, denied the study’s findings and said Cambodian doctors “apply the rational use of medicine”.

“We are implementi­ng monitoring, training and planning strategies in each referral hospital to reduce unnecessar­y prescripti­on of medication, such as antibiotic­s, to improve patient safety,” he said. “Currently, we are updating the infection prevention and control guideline, [as] this guideline has been implemente­d since 2010.”

According to theWorld Health Organizati­on (WHO), antibiotic­s have increasing­ly lost their effectiven­ess globally due to resistance, which could lead to more than 5 million deaths per year in the Asia Pacific region by 2050.

“Like other countries in the region, Cambodia is witnessing a growing threat of antimicrob­ial resistance, brought about by the excessive and irrational use of antibiotic­s at all levels of the food and livestock production, in the health care system and by the general public,” WHO spokespers­on Vicky Houssiere said in a statement yesterday.

At the recent launch of the Antibiotic Awareness Week, WHO representa­tive Dr Yungo Liu said the Kingdom had developed a policy and action plan to combat resistance, and called for “strict prescribin­g and dispensing practices”.

 ?? PHA LINA ?? A woman packs individual pills including antibiotic­s into medication packages at a pharmacy in Phnom Penh in 2014.
PHA LINA A woman packs individual pills including antibiotic­s into medication packages at a pharmacy in Phnom Penh in 2014.

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