4.6 Article

Decision Challenges for Managing Acute Paediatric Infections: Implications for Antimicrobial Resistance

Journal

ANTIBIOTICS-BASEL
Volume 12, Issue 5, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/antibiotics12050828

Keywords

antimicrobial resistance; antibiotics; antimicrobial stewardship; infection; paediatrics; cognitive bias; principal-agent theory

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The overprescribing of antibiotics in paediatrics contributes significantly to antimicrobial resistance, a global health emergency. In paediatric healthcare, the involvement of parents and carers as intermediaries between prescribers and patients complicates antimicrobial stewardship efforts. This article focuses on the healthcare system in the United Kingdom, describing the complex dynamics of decision-making among different stakeholders and outlining four dimensions of decision challenges. Several theory-based strategies are proposed to support stakeholders and improve antimicrobial stewardship.
Overprescribing of antibiotics in paediatrics accounts for a significant proportion of inappropriate antibiotic use in human healthcare, thereby contributing to the global health emergency of antimicrobial resistance. Antimicrobial stewardship efforts are complicated by the unique social dynamics in paediatric healthcare, with a specific challenge being the prominent role of parents and carers who act as intermediaries between prescribers and paediatric patients. In this Perspective article concentrating on healthcare of the United Kingdom, we describe this complicated interplay of different decision stakeholders (patients, parents and prescribers), outline four dimensions of decision challenges (social, psychological, systemic and specific diagnostic and treatment challenges) and provide a number of theory-based strategies for supporting different stakeholders during the decision process, ultimately with the aim of improving antimicrobial stewardship. Key decision challenges for patients and carers include limited knowledge and experience of managing infections, which were exacerbated during the COVID-19 pandemic and frequently result in health anxiety and inappropriate health-seeking behaviours. Challenges for medical prescribers span societal pressures from prominent patient litigation cases, cognitive biases, and system pressures to specific diagnostic problems (e.g., age limitations of current clinical scoring systems). Strategies for mitigating decision challenges in paediatric infection management will need to include a range of context- and stakeholder-specific actions, including improvements of integrated care and public health education as well as better clinical decision tools and access to evidence-based guidelines.

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