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Understanding the influence of parent-clinician communication on antibiotic prescribing for children with respiratory tract infections in primary care: a qualitative observational study using a conversation analysis approach

Cabral, Christie; Horwood, Jeremy; Symonds, Jon; Ingram, Jenny; Lucas, Patricia J.; Redmond, Niamh M.; Kai, Joe; Hay, Alastair D.; Barnes, Rebecca K.

Authors

Christie Cabral

Jeremy Horwood

Jon Symonds

Jenny Ingram

Patricia J. Lucas

Niamh M. Redmond

Alastair D. Hay

Rebecca K. Barnes



Abstract

Background: Acute respiratory tract infections (RTI) in children are a common reason for antibiotic prescribing. Clinicians’ prescribing decisions are influenced by perceived parental expectations for antibiotics, however there is evidence that parents actually prefer to avoid antibiotics. This study aimed to investigate the influence of parent-clinician communication on antibiotic prescribing for RTI in children in England.

Methods: A mixed methods analysis of videoed primary care consultations for children (under 12 years) with acute cough and RTI. Consultations were video-recorded in six general practices in southern England, selected for socio-economic diversity. 56 recordings were transcribed in detail and a subset of recordings and transcripts used to develop a comprehensive interaction-based coding scheme. The scheme was used to examine communication practices between parents and clinicians and how these related to antibiotic or non-antibiotic treatment strategies.

Results: Parents’ communication rarely implied an expectation for antibiotics, some explicitly offering a possible viral diagnosis. Clinicians mostly gave, or implied, a viral diagnosis and mainly recommended non-antibiotic treatment strategies. In the minority of cases where parents’ communication behaviours implied they may be seeking antibiotic treatment, antibiotics were not usually prescribed. Where clinicians did prescribe antibiotics, they voiced concern about symptoms or signs, including chest pain, discoloured phlegm, prolonged fever, abnormal chest sounds, or pink /bulging ear drums.

Conclusions: We found little evidence of a relationship between parents’ communication behaviours and antibiotic prescribing. Rather, where antibiotics were prescribed, this was associated with clinicians’ expressed concerns regarding symptoms and signs.

Citation

Cabral, C., Horwood, J., Symonds, J., Ingram, J., Lucas, P. J., Redmond, N. M., …Barnes, R. K. (2019). Understanding the influence of parent-clinician communication on antibiotic prescribing for children with respiratory tract infections in primary care: a qualitative observational study using a conversation analysis approach. BMC Family Practice, 20(1), Article 102. https://doi.org/10.1186/s12875-019-0993-9

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date May 17, 2019
Online Publication Date Jul 19, 2019
Publication Date 2019-12
Deposit Date Jul 22, 2019
Publicly Available Date Jul 24, 2019
Journal BMC Family Practice
Electronic ISSN 1471-2296
Publisher Springer Verlag
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 20
Issue 1
Article Number 102
DOI https://doi.org/10.1186/s12875-019-0993-9
Keywords Family Practice, Primary care, Antibiotics, Children, Parents, Communications, Conversation analysis, Respiratory tract infections
Public URL https://nottingham-repository.worktribe.com/output/2329798
Publisher URL https://bmcfampract.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s12875-019-0993-9

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