How patients’ experiences of respiratory tract infections affect healthcare-seeking and antibiotic use: insights from a cross-sectional survey in rural Anhui, China

Author:

Diao Mengjie,Shen Xingrong,Cheng Jing,Chai Jing,Feng Rui,Zhang Panpan,Zhou Rongyao,Lambert Helen,Wang DebinORCID

Abstract

ObjectiveTo investigate the occurrence of reported respiratory tract infection (RTI) symptoms and their effects on use of self and professional care among patients in the community.DesignA cross-sectional retrospective household survey.Setting12 administrative villages from rural Anhui, China.Participants2160 rural adult residents aged ≥18 years registered as rural residents and actually living in the sampled villages when this study was conducted.MethodThe respondents were recruited using stratified-clustered randomised sampling. A structured questionnaire was deployed to solicit information about social demographics, symptoms of last RTI and healthcare-seeking following the RTI. Descriptive analyses were performed to investigate the reported symptoms, and multivariate logistic regression models were developed to identify relationships between number of concurrent symptoms and healthcare-seeking and antibiotics use.ResultsA total of 1968 residents completed the survey, resulting in a response rate of 91.1%. The number of concurrent symptoms showed a clear increasing trend with seeking help from clinics and being prescribed antibiotics. Multivariate regression revealed statistically significant associations between the following: (a) visiting clinics and education (OR=0.790), sore throat (OR=1.355), cough (OR=1.492), shortness of breath (OR=1.707) and fever (OR=2.142); (b) buying medicine from shops without prescription and education (OR=1.230) and cough (OR=1.452); (c) getting antibiotics at clinics and sore throat (OR=2.05) and earache and/or tinnitus (OR=4.884); and (d) obtaining antibiotics at medicine shops and productive cough (OR=1.971).ConclusionsReported RTI symptoms play an important role in shaping both patient- and doctor-led responses.

Funder

China-UK Prosperity Found

Medical Research Council of the United Kingdom

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Publisher

BMJ

Subject

General Medicine

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