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Healthcare providers' knowledge and clinical practice surrounding shigellosis - DocStyles Survey, 2020. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Shigellosis is an acute diarrheal disease with various transmission routes, including contaminated food and water, but healthcare providers (HCP) lack awareness about some of these routes and the importance of antibiotic susceptibility testing (AST).
  • A web-based survey to HCP in the U.S. revealed that while many recognized food and water as transmission sources, fewer acknowledged person-to-person contact or sexual activity, particularly in men who have sex with men (MSM).
  • The findings highlight knowledge gaps among HCP regarding shigellosis transmission and antibiotic usage, suggesting that enhanced education could help prevent the spread of shigellosis and drug-resistant strains among at-risk populations.

Article Abstract

Background: Shigellosis is an acute diarrheal disease transmitted through contaminated food, water, objects, poor hand hygiene, or sexual activity. Healthcare providers (HCP) may not be aware of the multiple routes of Shigella transmission, populations at increased risk, or importance of antibiotic susceptibility testing (AST). This study assessed HCP knowledge and clinical practices regarding shigellosis and antibiotic resistance.

Methods: Porter Novelli Public Services administered a web-based survey (Fall DocStyles 2020) to HCP in the United States. Pediatricians, primary care physicians, nurse practitioners, and physician assistants completed questions about knowledge and clinical practice of acute diarrhea and shigellosis.

Results: Of 2196 HCP contacted, 1503 responded (68% response rate). Most identified contaminated food (85%) and water (79%) as routes of Shigella transmission; fewer recognized person-to-person contact (40%) and sexual activity (18%). Men who have sex with men (MSM) were identified as being at risk for shigellosis by 35% of respondents. Most reported counseling patients to wash hands (86%) and avoid food preparation (77%) when ill with shigellosis; 29% reported recommending avoiding sex. Many HCP reported treating shigellosis empirically with ciprofloxacin (62%) and azithromycin (32%), and 29% reported using AST to guide treatment.

Conclusions: We identified several gaps in shigellosis knowledge among HCP including MSM as a risk group, person-to-person transmission, and appropriate antibiotic use. Improving HCP education could prevent the spread of shigellosis, including drug-resistant infections, among vulnerable populations.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10717126PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12875-023-02213-3DOI Listing

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