1. Public Attitudes Towards COVID-19, Antibiotic Resistance, Preventive Measures: A Multi Center Cross-Sectional Study in the Arab Countries.
- Author
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Swed, Sarya, Motawea, Karem R., Bohsas, Haidara, Alibrahim, Hidar, Rakab, Amine, Hafez, Wael, Shaheen, Nour, Almoshantaf, Mohammad Badr, Ahmad, Shoaib, Safdar, Sifwa, Khairy, Lina Taha, Bakkour, Agyad, Muwaili, Ali Hadi Hussein, Muwaili, Dhuha Hadi Hussein, Abdelmajid, Fatima Abubaker Abdalla, Ahmad, Eman Mohammed sharif, Patwary, Muhammad Mainuddin, Ghaith, Hazem S., Albuni, Mhd Kutaiba, and Battikh, Elias
- Subjects
COVID-19 pandemic ,DRUG resistance in bacteria ,CROSS-sectional method ,PREVENTIVE health services ,SNOWBALL sampling - Abstract
Background and Aim: COVID-19 has shown how crucial awareness of the need to protect public health is to global security. Antibiotic resistance due to antibiotic misuse is seen as a worldwide health issue. Antibiotic use was significant during the COVID-19 epidemic, according to several nations. This research aims to investigate public attitudes on COVID-19, antibiotic resistance, and preventive measures during the COVID-19 pandemic in the Middle East. Methods: An online quantitative cross-sectional study in 17 Arabic nations was carried out between January 3 and March 4, 2022, using a structured questionnaire to evaluate participants' knowledge of COVID-19, their attitudes toward the new standard during the pandemic, and their use of antibiotics, and their resistance to them. The research was available to all Arabic people over 18 nations in the middle east. A convenient snowball sampling technique was used. SPSS version 20.0 was used to analyze the data. To analyze the results, binominal logistic regression was utilized. Statistical significance was defined as a p value of 0.05. Results: Of the 6145 responders, 24.1% believed COVID-19 might spread to asymptomatic people, whereas 13.6% thought using antibiotics would accelerate recovery from any illness. Moreover, half of the respondents said antibiotics only work against bacteria (64.6%). 70.8% of participants adopted the necessary safety measures. More than a third of respondents strongly supported placing foreign immigrants in quarantine (33%). However, more than 50% of those surveyed (52.5%) firmly supported using face masks in all public settings. Individuals with a medical education background had 2.6 times more appropriate understanding of antibiotic resistance than others. Furthermore, participants in the 30–49 age range had a better handle on the use of antibiotics and antibiotic resistance than other respondents by 1.1 times. Conclusion: Arab Health authorities should reconsider this health issue as soon about the inadequate level of awareness toward antibiotic use, resistance, and preventative practices during COVID-19. Many suggested strategies, especially solving the irregular antibiotic prescriptions during a COVID19 pandemic, should be implemented to increase public awareness of COVID19. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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