OAR@UM Collection:
/library/oar/handle/123456789/34136
2026-06-14T21:53:26ZWhat factors affect family practitioners in the prescription of antibiotics for respiratory tract infections in Malta?
/library/oar/handle/123456789/34142
Title: What factors affect family practitioners in the prescription of antibiotics for respiratory tract infections in Malta?
Abstract: 1. Reason for Research
Antibiotic resistance by bacteria is an increasing problem and one major
contribution to this is inappropriate antibiotic prescribing. Several international studies
have focused on identifying the causes of overprescribing. Local studies have shown
the reasons for encounter but did not look into what influences the practitioners working
in the Maltese islands. This seeks to identify those patient, clinical and doctor
characteristics that affect antibiotic prescribing.
2. Method
The study is based on a questionnaire survey where three hundred and twenty six
questionnaires were posted with self-addressed envelopes to all the family doctors
registered in Malta. The list of the practitioners was obtained from the Malta Medical
Council and their contact details were derived from the European Union Practitioner
list.
3. Results
There was a sixty-one percent response rate. The majority of the family doctors
were males, Maltese and solo practitioners who had been practicing between eleven and
thirty years and who had never consulted any guidelines in the previous weeks. The
other practitioner characteristics were equally distributed. Most of the doctors scaled
highly their knowledge on respiratory tract infections and their treatment and agreed
with delayed prescribing but were not willing to prescribe new antibiotics.
Family doctors were found to be affected by patient's age and gender, the
smoking status, the clinical condition of the patient and by patients who were persistent
in their demands. Family doctors were also affected by occupational factors and by
certain social factors. The clinical symptoms that prompt the practitioners in
prescribing an antibiotic are greenish nasal discharge, cough productive of greenish
sputum, shortness of breath and high fever. The doctors are also more ready to
prescribe an antibiotic when on examination they find pustular tonsillitis, otitis media or
externa, frontal percussion tenderness, localised chest crepitations and enlarged cervical
lymph nodes. Antibiotic prescribing is also affected by practitioner characteristics,
namely, gender, duration and area of practice, consultation of prescription guidelines,
knowledge of respiratory tract infections and their treatment, willingness to prescribe a
new antibiotic and agreement with delayed prescribing.
4. Discussion
Locally practicing family doctors are affected by patient characteristics that
would normally require extra attention in prescribing an antibiotic due to their increased
susceptibility to respiratory tract infections or due to possible adverse reactions. They
are aware of the importance of considering occupational factors in the management of
the patient and also look at the need of the community in their decisions to prescribe an
antibiotic. They are sensitive to particular social circumstances though not to economic
difficulties. The doctors are also affected by persistent patients but not by direct patient
expectations. Particular clinical characteristics indicating a bacterial infection induce
practitioners to prescribe an antibiotic but characteristics that falsely picture severity
have also an impact on the doctors, thus possibly contributing to inappropriate
prescribing. Inappropriate prescribing was related to male practitioners, increasing
duration of practice, rural practice, increasing guidelines consultation, decreasing
knowledge of respiratory tract infections and treatment, increasing willingness to
prescribe new antibiotics and decreasing approval of delayed prescribing.
5. Conclusion
This study shows what affects the family doctors in their prescription patterns,
thus indicating which practitioner groups and which patient and clinical characteristics
need to be addressed in devising programs to control antibiotic overprescribing and thus
reduce antibiotic resistance. Further studies are needed to confirm the presence and
illustrate the severity of inappropriate antibiotic prescribing in Malta.
Description: M.SC.FAMILY MEDICINE2012-01-01T00:00:00Z