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Patterns of physicians’ knowledge, attitude and prescribing trends against upper respiratory tract infections in Lahore, Pakistan

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dc.contributor.author Ullah, Kalim
dc.contributor.author Baloch, Marvi
dc.contributor.author Saleem, Fahad
dc.contributor.author Ahmad Khan, Mahtab
dc.contributor.author Saeed, Hamid
dc.contributor.author K Hashmi, Furqan
dc.contributor.author Ali Khan, Ayaz
dc.date.accessioned 2022-10-14T05:29:48Z
dc.date.available 2022-10-14T05:29:48Z
dc.date.issued 2020-07-17
dc.identifier.citation Ullah, K., Baloch, M., Saleem, F., Khan, M. A., Saeed, H., Hashmi, F. K., & Khan, A. A. (2020). Patterns of physicians' knowledge, attitude and prescribing trends against upper respiratory tract infections in Lahore, Pakistan. Pak J Pharm Sci, 33, 1889-98. en_US
dc.identifier.issn 1011-601X
dc.identifier.uri http://142.54.178.187:9060/xmlui/handle/123456789/13165
dc.description.abstract Although viruses cause most of upper respiratory tract infections but still antibiotics are irrationally prescribed in mild infections, especially in upper respiratory tract infections. To identify gaps among prescribers, due to lack of standard guidelines and antimicrobial stewardship programs, it is needed to check knowledge, attitude, perception and current prescribing pattern of antibiotics. Based on the data recommendations can be specified to overcome the prescribing deficiencies and increasing rates of antimicrobial resistance. It is inevitable to educate patients about ineffectiveness of antibiotics in viral infections, and to develop guidelines for prescribing antibiotics, running continuing medical education and establishing antibiotic stewardship programs. We conducted a cross-sectional survey-based study by engaging physicians of public and private sector hospitals in Lahore, Pakistan. About 66% agreed for semi-structured interview and met the inclusion criteria. Fifty percent of physicians have an understanding that antibiotics should be prescribed in URTIs, otherwise symptoms may get worsen. The only encouraging thing is that 78.8% believe that antibiotics are being misused and are major cause of increasing rate of resistance. Most of prescribers have an understanding that antibiotics should be prescribed in upper respiratory tract infections. They are prescribing antibiotics ignoring Center for Disease Control guidelines for the treatment or prophylaxis of upper respiratory infections. en_US
dc.language.iso en en_US
dc.publisher Karachi:Pakistan Journal of Pharmaceutical Sciences, university of Karachi. en_US
dc.subject Prescribing pattern en_US
dc.subject upper respiratory tract infections en_US
dc.subject antimicrobial resistance en_US
dc.subject antimicrobial resistance en_US
dc.title Patterns of physicians’ knowledge, attitude and prescribing trends against upper respiratory tract infections in Lahore, Pakistan en_US
dc.type Article en_US


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