Daisy
Senior Member (Voting Rights)
Blog in the BMJ, LSHTM tweeted about it today. The "evidence" for patient blaming does not stand up to scrutiny.....
https://blogs.bmj.com/bmj/2019/02/0...education-campaigns-on-antibiotic-resistance/
https://blogs.bmj.com/bmj/2019/02/0...education-campaigns-on-antibiotic-resistance/
It is therefore not productive to blame patients and the public for “demanding” antibiotics or putting unreasonable “pressure” on GPs based on scant evidence. While we welcome patient education campaigns as part of a wide-ranging effort to minimise unnecessary antimicrobial resistance, we caution against blaming patients for contributing to antimicrobial resistance. Ignoring the impact of health system factors on patterns of prescribing, including short consultation times, and, instead, relying on patient-blaming rhetoric, may increase mistrust or friction between GP and patient in the medium-to-long term. Patients are allies, not opponents, in limiting antimicrobial resistance, and should be seen as such.