News

Hispanics Self-Medicate With Oral Antibiotics


 

NEW ORLEANS — A substantial number of people in the U.S. Hispanic community self-medicate with oral antibiotics, according to a study presented at the annual conference of the Society of Teachers of Family Medicine.

Many countries in Latin America dispense antibiotics without a prescription, and individuals from these countries have cultural norms for self-medication, said Arch G. Mainous III, Ph.D.

The researchers interviewed 219 self-identified Hispanics, and 45% indicated they had purchased nonprescribed antibiotics outside the United States at some time; 16% had imported them. “Those results were striking,” said Dr. Mainous, professor of family medicine at the Medical University of South Carolina, Charleston. “Another striking feature was that 19% had acquired antibiotics not prescribed for the person in the United States; 93% [of them] said they got them in stores.”

Latin America has a high level of antibiotic resistance, Dr. Mainous said. U.S. interventions on resistance have decreased antibiotic use, but they focus on prescribing. To correct inappropriate acquisition and use, patient education materials should not only be available in Spanish, but also should be culturally sensitive, he suggested.

The findings of the study, Dr. Mainous said, “point to a large unrecognized reservoir of nonprescribed antibiotics likely used for inappropriate self-medication. We know from other studies that people in countries where antibiotics are available tend to take subtherapeutic doses.”

All participants were 18 years and older and were recruited from one of two clinics in Charleston. The majority (75%) were born in Mexico; 41% said they had been in the United States fewer than 4 years; and 90% did not have medical insurance. The common cold, ear infections, cough, and sore throat were the primary illnesses for which respondents took nonprescribed antibiotics.

Of interviewed individuals, 64% said they acquired antibiotics without a prescription because it was preferable to a physician visit. “Only 7% said there was a language barrier, so most did not want to spend the money or go to a doctor.”

This phenomenon is not limited to Hispanics, Dr. Mainous pointed out. “People in the Philippines, Taiwan, and Bangladesh will also buy subtherapeutic doses for self-medication.”

Recommended Reading

Start Dexamethasone Promptly for Meningitis
MDedge Internal Medicine
Meningitis Risk High If Child's Mom Pregnant
MDedge Internal Medicine
CDC's Travel Health 'Yellow Book' Online
MDedge Internal Medicine
Saline Nasal Wash Can Be Effective for Sinusitis
MDedge Internal Medicine
Pedicure Whirlpools May Swirl With Mycobacteria
MDedge Internal Medicine
Site Offers Seniors Advice on Shingles
MDedge Internal Medicine
MRSA-Related Vulvar and Labial Abscesses Seen in Children
MDedge Internal Medicine
Community-Acquired MRSA Is Dominant at N.Y. Hospital
MDedge Internal Medicine
Study: Linezolid Beats Vancomycin For Treatment of MRSA Infections
MDedge Internal Medicine
Data Watch: One-Third of Methicillin-Resistant Staphylococcus aureus in A Teaching Hospital Is Found to Be Community Acquired
MDedge Internal Medicine