Healthcare seeking outside healthcare facilities and antibiotic dispensing patterns in rural Burkina Faso: A mixed methods study

Author:

Valia Daniel123ORCID,Kouanda Juste Stéphane1,Ingelbeen Brecht24,Derra Karim1,Kaboré Bérenger1,Kiemdé François1,Rouamba Toussaint1,Rouamba Eli1,Hien Franck Sovi1,Campbell Linda56,Meudec Marie2,Robert Annie3,Tinto Halidou12,van der Sande Marianne A. B.24,Villalobos Hector Rodriguez7

Affiliation:

1. Institut de Recherche en Sciences de la Santé Direction Régionale du Centre‐Ouest/Clinical Research Unit of Nanoro Nanoro Burkina Faso

2. Department of Public Health Institute of Tropical Medicine Antwerp Belgium

3. Epidemiology and Biostatistics Unit, Institut de recherche expérimentale et clinique Université catholique de Louvain Brussels Belgium

4. Julius Center University Medical Center Utrecht Utrecht The Netherlands

5. Centre for Population, Family and Health University of Antwerp Antwerp Belgium

6. Department for Public Health and Primary Care University of Ghent Ghent Belgium

7. Microbiology Unit, Institut de recherche expérimentale et clinique Université catholique de Louvain Brussels Belgium

Abstract

AbstractObjectiveOptimising antibiotic use is important to limit increasing antibiotic resistance. In rural Burkina Faso, over‐the‐counter dispensing of antibiotics in community pharmacies and non‐licensed medicine retail outlets facilitates self‐medication. We investigated its extent, reasons and dispensing patterns.MethodsIn an exploratory mixed‐method design conducted between October 2020 and December 2021, this study first explored illness perceptions, the range of healthcare providers in communities, antibiotics knowledge and reasons for seeking healthcare outside healthcare facilities. Second, frequencies of illness and healthcare utilisation in the last 3 months were quantitatively measured.ResultsParticipants distinguished between natural and magico‐religious illnesses, according to origins. For illnesses considered to be ‘natural’, healthcare was mainly sought at healthcare facilities, private pharmacies and informal drug outlets. For illnesses considered as magico‐religious, traditional healers were mainly visited. Antibiotics were perceived in the community as medicines similar to painkillers. Healthcare‐seeking outside healthcare facilities was reported by 660/1973 (33.5%) participants reporting symptoms, including 315 (47.7%) to informal vendors. Healthcare seeking outside facilities was less common for 0–4‐year‐olds (58/534, 10.9% vs. 379/850, 44.1% for ≥5‐year‐olds) and decreased with improving socio‐economic status (108/237, 45.6% in the lowest quintile; 96/418, 23.0% in the highest). Reported reasons included financial limitation, and also proximity to informal drug vendors, long waiting times at healthcare facilities, and health professionals' non‐empathetic attitudes towards their patients.ConclusionThis study highlights the need to facilitate and promote access to healthcare facilities through universal health insurance and patient‐centred care including reducing patients' waiting time. Furthermore, community‐level antibiotic stewardship programmes should include community pharmacies and informal vendors.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Infectious Diseases,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,Parasitology

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