Attribution of inappropriate antibiotic prescribing to others |
‘I think those of us who have our own practice and control of things probably(…)‘get it’ more than the hourly non-vested person in your walk-in clinics who are just basically drawing an hourly salary and their whole interest is in just getting rid of somebody.’ – Birmingham, family medicine/internal medicine physician
‘We’re always practicing evidence-based medicine, so it becomes incredibly challenging. With adult medicine, they’ll give out antibiotics over the phone, antibiotics without doing swabs and chest X-rays, things like that, or even seeing the patient.’ – Chicago, paediatrician
‘A lot of us don’t like to prescribe antibiotics, but they go to urgent cares and they go to(…)1 min clinics and they get prescribed antibiotics.’ – Los Angeles, family medicine/internal medicine physician
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Patient demand as a driving factor |
‘We’re under pressure all day. You don’t want to get written up, potentially, for being insensitive, or not taking care of them, or physician ratings.’ – Birmingham, paediatrician
‘They come in and it’s a boxing match. You are fighting in that corner with the misconception, preconceived notion and you’re trying to tell them that 2+2 = 4 and they are saying’, ‘No, it’s purple’. – Birmingham, family medicine/internal medicine physician
‘Sometimes you just like, you know what, I’m beaten down; so, here’s your Z-Pak. See you. Next patient. I’m not going to sit here and argue with somebody for 5 min over why they don’t need it.’ – Philadelphia, family medicine/internal medicine physician
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