4.7 Article

Going shopping or consulting in medical visits: Caregivers' roles in pediatric antibiotic prescribing in China

Journal

SOCIAL SCIENCE & MEDICINE
Volume 290, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2021.114075

Keywords

Antibiotics; Over-prescription; Interaction; Doctor-patient relationship; Medical authority; China

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Antimicrobial Resistance (AMR) is a global public health crisis, with over-prescription of antibiotics in China due to patients and caregivers challenging physician authority. The lack of medical authority contributes to physicians prescribing antibiotics against their professional judgment. Educational campaigns are necessary to promote rational antibiotic use and protect physicians' professional authority.
Antimicrobial Resistance (AMR) is one of the gravest global public health crises today. Over-prescription in clinical settings is a primary driver. Despite its magnitude and scale, the problem of antibiotic over-prescription in China has not been understood adequately nor addressed effectively. Based on a corpus of 183 video-recorded medical conversations in the Chinese pediatric setting, we show that patient caregivers frequently challenge the physician's medical authority by resisting treatment recommendations, displaying a high level of entitlement to influence the treatment decision. As a result, even when the physicians do not recommend antibiotics based on their professional judgment, they prescribe in response to caregiver pressure. We argue that the relatively low level of medical authority is a significant contributor to the problem. Under this consumerist model of doctorpatient relationship, antibiotics are oriented to by the caregivers as a negotiable commodity and physicians are unable to fulfill their role as gatekeepers. Educational campaigns are needed to promote rational use of antibiotics among patients and caregivers, and serious efforts are called for to protect physicians' professional authority in China.

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