Abstract

Antibiotic resistance, a consequence of antibiotic use, is a threat to health, with severe consequences for resource constrained settings. If determinants for human antibiotic use in India, a lower middle income country, with one of the highest antibiotic consumption in the world could be understood, interventions could be developed, having implications for similar settings. Year wise data for India, for potential determinants and antibiotic consumption, was sourced from publicly available databases for the years 2000–2010. Data was analyzed using Partial Least Squares regression and correlation between determinants and antibiotic consumption was evaluated, formulating ‘Predictors’ and ‘Prediction models’. The ‘prediction model’ with the statistically most significant predictors (root mean square errors of prediction for train set-377.0 and test set-297.0) formulated from a combination of Health infrastructure + Surface transport infrastructure (HISTI), predicted antibiotic consumption within 95% confidence interval and estimated an antibiotic consumption of 11.6 standard units/person (14.37 billion standard units totally; standard units = number of doses sold in the country; a dose being a pill, capsule, or ampoule) for India for 2014. The HISTI model may become useful in predicting antibiotic consumption for countries/regions having circumstances and data similar to India, but without resources to measure actual data of antibiotic consumption.

Highlights

  • A range of determinants governing human antibiotic use or health seeking behaviour in various countries/ regions, such as social, demographic, economic, climatic, educational, cultural and health care related, have been reported or discussed in literature[5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14]

  • As nationwide studies on factors determining human antibiotic consumption are lacking for India, it was of interest to explore the determinants for antibiotic consumption for India

  • The root mean square error of prediction (RMSEP) for training set for the Health infrastructure + Surface transport infrastructure (HISTI) model (Health Infrastructure + Surface Transport Infrastructure) was 376.0 and for test set 297.3, which was lowest compared to other models

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Summary

Introduction

A range of determinants governing human antibiotic use or health seeking behaviour in various countries/ regions, such as social, demographic, economic, climatic, educational, cultural and health care related, have been reported or discussed in literature[5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14]. In case of India, such studies on antibiotics are mostly related to antibiotic use in hospitals or community or focus on specific disease[15,16,17,18]. As nationwide studies on factors determining human antibiotic consumption are lacking for India, it was of interest to explore the determinants for antibiotic consumption for India. India being a medium human development index country (human development index-HDI rank 131 amongst[188] countries)[19], it was considered that such a study could have implications for countries with proximate HDI and similar settings

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