• Title of article

    Knowledge and Antibiotics Prescription Pattern among Ugandan Oral Health Care Providers: A Cross-sectional Survey

  • Author/Authors

    Rwenyonyi, Charles Mugisha Department of Dentistry - Makerere University College of Health Sciences - Kampala, Uganda , Kamulegeya, Adriane Department of Dentistry - Makerere University College of Health Sciences - Kampala, Uganda , William, Buwembo Department of Anatomy - Makerere University College of Health Sciences - Kampala, Uganda

  • Pages
    6
  • From page
    61
  • To page
    66
  • Abstract
    Background and aims. Irrational prescription of antibiotics by clinicians might lead to drug resistance. Clinicians do prescribe antibiotics for either prophylactic or therapeutic reasons. The decision of when and what to prescribe leaves room for misuse and therefore it is imperative to continuously monitor knowledge and pattern of prescription. The aim of the pre-sent study was to determine the knowledge of antibiotic use and the prescription pattern among dental health care practitio-ners in Uganda. Materials and methods. A structured and pretested questionnaire was sent to 350 dental health care practitioners by post or physical delivery. All the questionnaires were sent with self-addressed and prepaid postage envelopes to enable re-spondents to mail back the filled questionnaires. Chi-squared test was used to test for any significant differences between groups of respondents based on qualitative variables. Results. The response rate was 40.3% (n=140). Of these 52.9 % were public health dental officers (PHDOs) and 47.1% were dental surgeons. The males constituted 74.3% of the respondents. There were statistically significant differences be-tween dental surgeons and (PHDOs) in knowledge on prophylactic antibiotic use (P = 0.001) and patient influence on pre-scription (P = 0.001). Amoxicillin, in combination with metronidazole, was the most common combination of antibiotics used followed by co-trimoxazole with metronidazole. Conclusion. The knowledge of dental health care practitioners in antibiotic use in this study was generally low. A combi-nation of amoxicillin with metronidazole was the most commonly prescribed antibiotics subsequent to different dental pro-cedures.
  • Keywords
    Uganda , prophylaxis , prescription , dental practitioner , Antibiotic use
  • Journal title
    Astroparticle Physics
  • Serial Year
    2011
  • Record number

    2429853