Abstract

Primary care clinicians in rural China are required to balance their immediate duty of care to their patients with patient expectations for antibiotics, financial pressures, and their wider responsibilities to public health. The clinicians in our sample appear to make greater efforts in managing immediate clinical risks and personal reputation than in considering the long-term consequences of their actions as potentially contributing to antimicrobial resistance. This paper employs Bourdieu's theory of capital to examine the perspectives and practices of Chinese primary care clinicians prescribing antibiotics at low-level health facilities in rural Anhui province, China. We examine the institutional context and clinical realities of these rural health facilities and identify how these influence the way clinicians utilize antibiotics in the management of common upper respiratory tract infections. Confronted with various official regulations and institutional pressures to generate revenues, informants' desire to maintain good relations with patients coupled with their concerns for patient safety result in tensions between their professional knowledge of “rational” antibiotic use and their actual prescribing practices. Informants often deferred responsibility for antimicrobial stewardship to the government or upper echelons of the healthcare system and drew on the powerful public discourse of “suzhi” (human quality) to legitimize their liberal prescribing of antibiotics in an imagined socioeconomic hierarchy. The demands of both practitioners' and patients' social, cultural, and economic forms of capital help to explain patterns of antibiotic prescribing in rural Chinese health facilities.

Highlights

  • Pathogenic resistance to antimicrobials (AMR) is widely acknowledged as a key global health challenge (World Health Organization, 2012, 2015; United Nations, 2016)

  • If AMR is an outcome of clinical praxis, as well as embodied dispositions influenced by the social, cultural, and economic capital forming the habitus of particular groups1, studies that foster an understanding of these sociocultural drivers could potentially identify and guide the changes needed to effectively manage AMR

  • This study reveals multiple factors that influenced antibiotic prescribing in our sample of medical practitioners

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Summary

Introduction

Pathogenic resistance to antimicrobials (AMR) is widely acknowledged as a key global health challenge (World Health Organization, 2012, 2015; United Nations, 2016). In order to mitigate this threat, it is imperative to understand all the factors influencing the development of antibiotic resistance in China at this time. Since antimicrobial resistance begins to evolve as soon as new antibiotics begin to be used, the push to develop new antimicrobials is not likely to resolve AMR. 1–2) argues: “The conditions promoting the biological mechanisms of antimicrobial resistance are deeply social, shaped by cultural, political, and economic processes. If AMR is an outcome of clinical praxis, as well as embodied dispositions influenced by the social, cultural, and economic capital forming the habitus of particular groups, studies that foster an understanding of these sociocultural drivers could potentially identify and guide the changes needed to effectively manage AMR The mechanism for antimicrobial resistance is biological, adherence to antimicrobial stewardship is fundamentally social [and] as a social challenge it demands social solution[s].” if AMR is an outcome of clinical praxis, as well as embodied dispositions influenced by the social, cultural, and economic capital forming the habitus of particular groups, studies that foster an understanding of these sociocultural drivers could potentially identify and guide the changes needed to effectively manage AMR

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