AI Article Synopsis

  • Healthcare professionals, particularly GPs, perceive that recent immigrant patients are more likely to expect antibiotics compared to native Dutch patients, but this expectation has declined in recent years.
  • GPs face challenges with language barriers when interacting with immigrant patients, which increases diagnostic uncertainty and complicates communication, potentially leading to inappropriate antibiotic prescriptions.
  • Both GPs and pharmacists recognize the need for multi-language support and effective communication strategies to improve patient interactions and reduce the risk of unnecessary antibiotic use.

Article Abstract

Background: If healthcare professionals perceive that patients strongly expect to be prescribed antibiotics, inappropriate prescriptions may result. As it is unknown whether this happens more often with certain patient groups, we explored whether general practitioners (GPs) and pharmacists perceived such expectations when they provided antibiotics to immigrant patients.

Methods: Ten GPs and five pharmacists from Rotterdam, the Netherlands, were interviewed on the basis of a semi-structured topic guide. Atlas.ti software was then used to conduct a thematic analysis.

Results: GPs felt that immigrant patients, especially those who had arrived recently, were more likely to expect to receive antibiotics than native Dutch patients. However, these expectations had decreased over the last years and did not always lead immigrants to exert pressure on them. Except for language barriers, the factors reported by GPs to influence their antibiotic prescribing behaviour were unrelated to patients' immigrant background. If there was a language barrier, GPs experienced greater diagnostic uncertainty and needed additional time to obtain and communicate correct information. To overcome language barriers, they often used point-of-care testing to convince patients that antibiotics were unnecessary. Although pharmacists rarely experienced problems dispensing antibiotics to immigrants, they and GPs both struggled to find effective ways of overcoming language barriers, and stressed the need for multi-language support materials.

Conclusion: While pharmacists rarely experience any problems providing antibiotics to immigrants, GPs regularly face language barriers with immigrant patients, which complicate the diagnostic process and communicating information in the limited available time. This sometimes leads antibiotics to be prescribed inappropriately.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9058745PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12875-022-01706-xDOI Listing

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