The role of multidimensional poverty in antibiotic misuse: a mixed-methods study of self-medication and non-adherence in Kenya, Tanzania, and Uganda
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Date
2023Author
Fredricks, Kathryn
Kansiime, Catherine
Mushi, Martha F
Asiimwe, Benon B
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Background Poverty is a proposed driver of antimicrobial resistance, influencing inappropriate antibiotic use in lowincome and middle-income countries (LMICs). However, at subnational levels, studies investigating multidimensional
poverty and antibiotic misuse are sparse, and the results are inconsistent. We aimed to investigate the relationship
between multidimensional poverty and antibiotic use in patient populations in Kenya, Tanzania, and Uganda.
Methods In this mixed-methods study, the Holistic Approach to Unravelling Antimicrobial Resistance (HATUA)
Consortium collected data from 6827 outpatients (aged 18 years and older, or aged 14–18 years and pregnant) with
urinary tract infection (UTI) symptoms in health-care facilities in Kenya, Tanzania, and Uganda. We used Bayesian
hierarchical modelling to investigate the association between multidimensional poverty and self-reported antibiotic selfmedication and non-adherence (ie, skipping a dose and not completing the course). We analysed linked qualitative
in-depth patient interviews and unlinked focus-group discussions with community members.
Findings Between Feb 10, 2019, and Sept 10, 2020, we collected data on 6827 outpatients, of whom 6345 patients had
complete data; most individuals were female (5034 [79·2%]), younger than 35 years (3840 [60·5%]), worked in
informal employment (2621 [41·3%]), and had primary-level education (2488 [39·2%]). Antibiotic misuse was more
common among those least deprived, and lowest among those living in severe multidimensional poverty. Regardless
of poverty status, difficulties in affording health care, and more familiarity with antibiotics, were related to more
antibiotic misuse. Qualitative data from linked qualitative in-depth patient interviews (n=82) and unlinked focusgroup discussions with community members (n=44 groups) suggested that self-medication and treatment nonadherence were driven by perceived inconvenience of the health-care system, financial barriers, and ease of
unregulated antibiotic access.
Interpretation We should not assume that higher deprivation drives antibiotic misuse. Structural barriers such as
inefficiencies in public health care, combined with time and financial constraints, fuel alternative antibiotic access
points and treatment non-adherence across all levels of deprivation. In designing interventions to reduce antibiotic
misuse and address antimicrobial resistance, greater attention is required to these structural barriers that discourage
optimal antibiotic use at all levels of the socioeconomic hierarchy in LMICs.
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