Hungarian general practice paediatricians’ antibiotic prescribing behaviour for suspected respiratory tract infections: a qualitative study
Balázs Babarczy, Ágnes Hajdu, Ria Benko, Mária Matuz, Renáta Papp, Pantelis Antoniou, Ketevan Kandelaki, Danilo Lo Fo Wong, Sahil Khan Warsi

TL;DR
Hungarian pediatricians' antibiotic prescribing for respiratory infections is influenced by personal experience and patient factors, with a growing but still insufficient awareness of antimicrobial resistance.
Contribution
The study identifies factors influencing antibiotic prescribing behavior in Hungarian pediatricians using a behavioral framework.
Findings
Personal experience and physical examination are central to diagnostic and treatment decisions.
Physicians consider patient history and social background when prescribing antibiotics.
Antibiotic prescription frequency appears to have decreased, but knowledge gaps about AMR remain.
Abstract
Inappropriate antibiotic prescribing is a major cause of antimicrobial resistance (AMR). The aim of this study was to explore paediatric general practitioners’ (GP Peds) antibiotic prescription practice in suspected respiratory tract infections (RTIs), using the capability–opportunity–motivation–behaviour framework. The design is a qualitative study based on individual, semistructured telephone or virtual interviews. Paediatric general practice in Hungary. We applied stratified maximum variation sampling to cover the categories of age, sex and geographical location of participants. We interviewed 22 GP Peds. Nine were male and 13 were female: 2 of them were less than 40 years old, 14 were between 40 and 60 years, and 6 were above 60 years. 10 worked in low-antibiotic prescription areas, 5 in areas with medium levels of antibiotic prescription, 3 in high-antibiotic prescription areas,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAntibiotic Use and Resistance · Patient Satisfaction in Healthcare · Respiratory and Cough-Related Research
