Reconciling imperatives: Clinical guidelines, antibiotic prescribing and the enactment of good care in lower-level health facilities in Tororo, Uganda.
Susan NayigaLaurie Denyer WillisSarah G StaedkeClare I R ChandlerPublished in: Global public health (2022)
Faced with the threat of antimicrobial resistance, health workers are urged to reduce unnecessary prescription of antimicrobials. Clinical guidelines are expected to form the basis of prescribing decisions in practice. Emerging through evaluations of best practice - bundling clinical, technological and economic dimensions - guidelines also create benchmarks through which practice can be assessed with metrics. To understand the relationships between guidelines and practice in the prescribing and dispensing of antibiotics, ethnographic fieldwork was undertaken in lower-level health care facilities in rural Eastern Uganda for 10 months between January and October 2020, involving direct observations during and outside of clinics and interviews with staff. In a context of scarcity, where 'care' is characterised by delivery of medicines, and is constituted beyond algorithmic outputs, we observed that clinical practice was shaped by availability of resources, and professional and patient expectations, as much as by the clinical guidelines. For stewardship to care for patients as well as for medicines, a better understanding of clinical practice and expectations of care is required in relation to and beyond clinical guidelines.
Keyphrases
- healthcare
- clinical practice
- primary care
- quality improvement
- palliative care
- antimicrobial resistance
- public health
- end stage renal disease
- pain management
- south africa
- newly diagnosed
- mental health
- health information
- risk assessment
- chronic kidney disease
- peritoneal dialysis
- social media
- adverse drug
- drug induced
- health insurance