The National - News

Antibiotic use has to be controlled

Patients who bypass doctors and go straight to pharmacies are helping cause superbugs

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With drug-resistant superbugs posing an increasing risk to health worldwide, the danger of antibiotic­s being handed out like sweets is obvious. But, as we reported yesterday, antibiotic­s are not just being dispensed liberally in the UAE but are often handed out without any kind of doctor’s prescripti­on at all.

Reporters for The National posed as patients to visit a dozen pharmacies in Dubai and Abu Dhabi. Three of the seven pharmacies in Dubai offered a course of antibiotic­s without prescripti­on to deal with claimed symptoms of three days of sickness and diarrhoea. In Abu Dhabi, three of the five pharmacies visited also offered a range of antibiotic­s without prescripti­on.

Quite apart from the long-term risk of superbugs becoming resistant to antibiotic­s, these findings also suggest that pharmacies are usurping the role rightly played by doctors in ensuring patients get the appropriat­e care.

The ability of patients to go straight to a pharmacy removes doctors’ important safeguard role to identify the underlying problem rather than simply treating the symptoms. Sometimes patients will get well without the need to use antibiotic­s, while at other times there is a far bigger problem at play which, if identified early through proper medical examinatio­n, is far more likely to be treated successful­ly.

One factor that may be playing a part in this is the paucity of community health centres in some areas, as we also reported yesterday. Dubai Health Authority reports there is a health centres and peripheral clinic for every 30,000 people in the emirate. However these are often concentrat­ed in long-establishe­d areas and residents of places such as Dubai’s Remraam community face a 30-minute drive to reach a medical centre.

For some, there will be a temptation to go straight to a pharmacy. For those on lower incomes whose medical cover requires them to make a co-payment, there is also a temptation to bypass the medical centre and go straight to the pharmacy.

The medical system is sophistica­ted enough to cope with this, but it requires pharmacies to act as a responsibl­e gatekeeper, rejecting those who are tempted to bypass the process of getting a prescripti­on. This is not just important to our health, but to the health of millions around the world.

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