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Germs Are Germs, and Why Not Take a Risk? Patients' Expectations for Prescribing Antibiotics in an Inner-City Emergency Department

机译:细菌是细菌,为什么不冒险?患者对城市急诊科开具抗生素的期望

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Background. Extensive use of unnecessary antibiotics has driven the emergence of resistant bacterial strains, posing a threat to public health. Physicians are more likely to prescribe antibiotics when they believe that patients expect them. Current attempts to change these expectations highlight the distinction between viruses and bacteria (germs are germs). Fuzzy-trace theory further predicts that patients expect antibiotics because they make decisions based on categorical gist, producing strategies that encourage risk taking when the status quo is bad (i.e., why not take a risk?). We investigate both hypotheses. Methods. We surveyed patients visiting the emergency department of a large urban hospital (72 [64%] were African American) using 17 Likert scale questions and 2 free-response questions regarding patient expectations for antibiotics. Results. After the clinical encounter, 113 patients completed the survey. Fifty-four (48%) patients agreed with items that assess the germs are germs hypothesis, whereas 86 (76%) agreed with items that assess the why not take a risk? hypothesis. Why not take a risk? captures significant unique variance in a factor analysis and is neither explained by germs are germs nor by patients' lack of knowledge regarding side effects. Of the 81 patients who rejected the germs are germs hypothesis, 61 (75%) still indicated agreement with the why not take a risk? hypothesis. Several other misconceptions were also investigated. Conclusions. Our findings suggest that recent public health campaigns that have focused on educating patients about the differences between viruses and bacteria omit a key motivation for why patients expect antibiotics, supporting fuzzy-trace theory's predictions about categorical gist. The implications for public health and emergency medicine are discussed.
机译:背景。大量使用不必要的抗生素已导致耐药菌的出现,对公共健康构成威胁。当医生相信患者期望使用抗生素时,他们更有可能开抗生素。当前改变这些期望的尝试突出了病毒和细菌(细菌是细菌)之间的区别。模糊痕迹理论进一步预测,患者之所以希望使用抗生素,是因为他们基于分类要旨做出决策,并在现状不佳时制定鼓励风险承担的策略(即为什么不冒风险?)。我们研究了两种假设。方法。我们使用17个李克特量表问题和2个关于患者对抗生素期望值的自由回答问题,对前往一家大型城市医院急诊室的患者(72名[64%]是非裔美国人)进行了调查。结果。经过临床接触,共有113名患者完成了调查。五十四(48%)名患者同意评估细菌的项目是细菌假说,而86名(76%)患者同意评估为何不冒险的项目?假设。为什么不冒险?可以在因素分析中捕获明显的独特差异,并且既不能以病菌为病原菌也不能通过患者对副作用的知识缺乏来解释。在拒绝细菌的81位患者中,有细菌假设,其中61位(75%)仍然表示同意,为什么不冒险?假设。还调查了其他几种误解。结论我们的发现表明,最近集中于教育患者有关病毒和细菌之间差异的公共卫生运动,省略了为什么患者需要抗生素的关键动机,从而支持了模糊痕迹理论对分类依据的预测。讨论了对公共卫生和急诊医学的影响。

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