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An overview of self-medication: A major cause of antibiotic resistance and a threat to global public health

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JOURNAL OF THE PAKISTAN MEDICAL ASSOCIATION
卷 71, 期 3, 页码 943-949

出版社

PAKISTAN MEDICAL ASSOC
DOI: 10.47391/JPMA.1331

关键词

Antibiotics; Bacterial resistance; Prevalence; Self-medication

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Self-medication refers to the use of medicines without consulting a doctor based on personal experience, which may lead to unnecessary use of drugs and contribute to antibiotic resistance, especially in developing countries where medicines are easily accessible without prescription. Control measures are necessary to minimize antibiotic resistance rates caused by self-medication behaviors.
Self-medication is the use of medicines by people on the basis of their own experience without consulting a doctor. People use medicines for pain management or to cure a disease and sometime this may be unnecessary. There are a lot of public and professional health concerns about misuse of medicines and globally physicians agree upon this rising issue that leads to antibiotic resistance. In developing countries, medicines without prescription are easily available which results in many adverse outcomes, especially bacterial resistance. Insufficient healthcare services and socioeconomic factors result in increased proportion of self-medication compared to drugs prescribed by physicians. The current narrative review was planned to focus on indicating prevalence rate of self-medication in different developed and under-developed countries, major risk factors and control of self-medication due to which antibiotic resistance rate can be minimised. The issue needs urgent attention of representative authorities for taking serious actions. Furthermore, arranging awareness seminars and implementing new policies/regulations to prevent the sale of any drug/antibiotic without prescription could play a vital role in bringing this alarming issue under control.

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