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PLOS ONE logoLink to PLOS ONE
. 2021 Dec 14;16(12):e0261368. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0261368

Understanding the social drivers of antibiotic use during COVID-19 in Bangladesh: Implications for reduction of antimicrobial resistance

Abul Kalam 1,*,#, Shahanaj Shano 2,3,#, Mohammad Asif Khan 4, Ariful Islam 3, Narelle Warren 5, Mohammad Mahmudul Hassan 6, Mark Davis 5,7
Editor: Monica Cartelle Gestal8
PMCID: PMC8670684  PMID: 34905563

Abstract

Antimicrobial resistance (AMR) is a global public health crisis that is now impacted by the COVID-19 pandemic. Little is known how COVID-19 risks influence people to consume antibiotics, particularly in contexts like Bangladesh where these pharmaceuticals can be purchased without a prescription. This paper identifies the social drivers of antibiotics use among home-based patients who have tested positive with SARS-CoV-2 or have COVID-19-like symptoms. Using qualitative telephone interviews, the research was conducted in two Bangladesh cities with 40 participants who reported that they had tested positive for coronavirus (n = 20) or had COVID-19-like symptoms (n = 20). Our analysis identified five themes in antibiotic use narratives: antibiotics as ‘big’ medicine; managing anxiety; dealing with social repercussions of COVID-19 infection; lack of access to COVID-19 testing and healthcare services; and informal sources of treatment advice. Antibiotics were seen to solve physical and social aspects of COVID-19 infection, with urgent ramifications for AMR in Bangladesh and more general implications for global efforts to mitigate AMR.

Introduction

Along with its direct impacts on the health of individuals, the COVID-19 pandemic is implicated in the increased, off-prescription use of antimicrobials, practices that are thought to contribute to antimicrobial resistance (AMR) [1, 2]. Although clinical services in affluent countries have reported decrease in antibiotic prescription since the pandemic [3], Lower-and-Middle Income Countries (LMICs) are reporting antibiotic use coupled with a higher burden of COVID-19 infection [4]. AMR will further burden healthcare systems and worsen health outcomes [1, 5]. According to World Health Organization (WHO) interim guidelines, antibiotics can be used when there is secondary co-infection seen among patients with COVID-19 [6], but are discouraged amongst those with mild symptoms. Despite these recommendations, the WHO has reported that azithromycin is widely used with other medicines, and oseltamivir and lopinavir/ritonavir are being combined with antibiotics. Antibiotic use appears to be high among COVID-19 patients [7], with one report indicating up to 45% of coronavirus patients were receiving antibiotic treatment [8]. Clinically-unjustified use of antibiotics is thought to be linked with AMR, which is estimated to claim death of 700,000 people per annum [9]. It is projected that AMR-related mortality will increase during the pandemic and some have reported more than 130,000 deaths in 2020 alone [10]. The factors that drive antibiotic use during COVID-19 need to be documented and understood to strengthen public health efforts to simultaneously respond to the pandemic and reduce AMR [5, 1014].

LMICs face the twin burdens of increased risk from COVID-19 and AMR. Salient factors include poorly resourced health and hygiene programs, health care services, health governance, and ineffective regulatory and legislative mechanisms controlling antibiotic use [1517]. Inadequate testing capacity, limitations in health care service provision, and poor health infrastructure are considered major factors for the increased burden of COVID-19 in LMICs [4, 18, 19]. Like many other LMICs, COVID-19 and AMR pose immense threats in Bangladesh. Over the counter (OTC) sales promote easy access to antibiotics [17, 20] through drug shops, private and public health centers, and specialized hospitals [21]. Along with professional doctors, unqualified providers in the informal health care sector also prescribe antibiotics [22, 23]. The aggressive and sometimes unethical marketing practices of pharmaceutical companies are also linked with the over-prescription of antibiotics [24]. Moreover, most antimicrobials are prescribed based on best-guess and without microbial aetiology [23, 25]. However, the Government of Bangladesh (GoB) adopted a National Action Plan (NAP) in 2017 [26] to reduce the impact of AMR. Understanding the socio-cultural dimensions of antibiotic prescription and use has been identified as crucial for the successful implementation of the National Action Plan in Bangladesh [20].

Antibiotic use is deeply embedded in the socio-economic fabric of everyday life in Bangladesh and, in particular, is woven into the significance of community markets for everyday life [27]. Hence, the buying and selling of goods and services shapes the social life of antibiotics [28]. Moreover, taking and giving of medicines contributes to the meaning of healing, over and above chemical action of pharmaceuticals on disease states [29]. Among general populations, the biomedical properties of antimicrobials are not well understood but they are perceived as highly effective and powerful treatments. Research among Australian ethnic communities and the general public showed that people have diverse understandings of antibiotics and AMR, not all of which were aligned with scientific knowledge and authorized recommendations [3032]. Qualitative research in Malaysian lower income communities noted that antibiotics were understood to hasten recovery from illness, reduce fever and relieve pain [33]. Several New Zealand studies have reported limited knowledge and understanding of antibiotic use [3437]. A mixed methods study with community members in Pakistan found that antibiotics were perceived as able to cure all types of infections [38]. Several Bangladesh studies reported that antibiotics were perceived as powerful medicines which lead to quick results, work against almost all diseases, including viruses, cold cough, diarrhea, food poisoning, infection, dental carries and toothache, irritable bowel syndrome, acne, ear and throat pain and work as preventative medicines [20, 3941].

It is important not to frame these research findings as general public’s knowledge deficits that can be addressed with more accurate and copious information. Medical anthropologists and sociologists urge for deeper understanding of the beliefs and meanings associated with antimicrobials, rather than a focus on measuring and correcting knowledge [42, 43]. Explanations of antibiotics and antibiotic use may diverge from biomedical knowledge due to socio-economic status and cultural context [31, 43]. This approach is all the more important in the context of COVID-19, when health and socio-cultures are imbued with new and urgent risks to life.

Our paper, therefore, seeks to provide deeper insight into the social drivers of antibiotic use during the COVID-19 pandemic, in order to inform public health policy and communications on the pandemic and its intersections with AMR. In what follows, we assume that taking and giving medicines are social acts that are deeply imbued with ramified psychological and socio-cultural meanings, perhaps most keenly in time of pandemic. We seek to draw out the explanations and assumptions respondents made about their COVID-19 diagnosis or suspected infection and in that context how they made use of, and justified, antibiotics. Prior to explaining our methods, we provide below some background information about the pandemic in Bangladesh to help contextualize the experiential narratives we analyze in what follows.

COVID-19 in Bangladesh

Bangladesh reported its first laboratory-confirmed SARS-CoV-2 case on 8th March of 2020. As part of the response mechanism, GoB called a nationwide ‘lockdown’ from 26 March to 30 May. Despite these actions, at the time of the current study (by 29 June 2020), Bangladesh reported 141,801 diagnoses of COVID-19 and 1782 deaths [44]. Misunderstandings of the concepts of general leave and lockdown [45] combined with structural barriers to physical distancing and quarantining [46] compromised the efforts to contain the spread of infection. The extreme insufficiency of testing capacity due to inadequate quantities of testing kits and suitably equipped laboratory facilities suggest that many cases remained undetected. At 29 June 2020, Bangladesh had a test rate of less than 8 in every one hundred thousand [4].

Bangladesh also faced severe challenges in terms of managing confirmed cases in hospital settings due to infrastructural and staffing issues. There are only 399 Intensive Care Units (ICUs) in government hospitals in Bangladesh, with 218 in Dhaka city alone [45]. The size of the health work force is a major problem in Bangladesh, with only 4.90 registered physicians and 2.90 registered nurses per 10,000 population [47]. Moreover, medical workers were provided with low quality personal protective equipment [45], placing them, their patients and attendants at risk of infection. For these reasons, many patients preferred to remain at home fearing lack of access to comprehensive treatment in hospitals [48]. Although the government provided advice for home-based patients, specialists and researchers raised concerns about improper coordination based on the interim guidelines on home care for patients with COVID-19 [49].

Materials and methods

Study design

This study employed an exploratory qualitative approach to identify the social drivers of antibiotic use among at home COVID-19 patients and those who were undiagnosed and experiencing symptoms. We explored individual’s explanatory models of antibiotics in order to deepen knowledge and understanding of antibiotics use in the age of COVID-19. Where applicable, the study followed the Consolidated Criteria for Reporting Qualitative Research (COREQ) checklist for qualitative research [50].

Study setting and inclusion criteria

The study was conducted from May to June 2020 in two Bangladeshi cities—Dhaka, the capital city with a population over 21 million, and Chattogram, the largest commercial city with a population of more than 3.9 million. These cities were selected as they were considered epicenters for the spread of COVID-19 [51] and had the highest number of positive cases (Dhaka-71% and Chattogram-14% out of 141,801 total positive cases) at the time of data collection [44]. Potential participants were invited to take part in the interviews if they met the following inclusion criteria: i) they reported that they had been tested positive with COVID-19 or had COVID-19 like symptoms (like fever, dry cough, sore throat and loss of taste or smelling sensation) ii) received home care; and iii) had taken antibiotics during illness.

Recruitment process and sample size

A purposive sampling was adopted to ensure an even distribution of gender and age. Participants were recruited through social media advertisements, and this was supplemented by a network sampling strategy. People interested in the study contacted the lead researchers (MAK, SS, MMH, AI) who provided a verbal description of the study. During this initial discussion, the potential participants were asked if they had been clinically diagnosed with COVID-19, had symptoms and if they recalled the name of antibiotics they had consumed. All of the participants mentioned the brand names of the antibiotics and these brand names were then linked back to the antibiotic type (group). If a volunteer met the inclusion criteria, they were invited to participate in the interview. Due to COVID-19 safe requirements, those who wished to participate in the study, provided verbal consent before being interviewed by mobile phone by two research assistants, one male and one female. Five individuals refused to take part in the interviews due to their busy schedule.

Interviews continued until thematic saturation was observed. During data collection, geographical location and participants’ characteristics (i.e., gender, age, educational attainment) were considered in relation to the inclusion criteria. Forty interviews were conducted in this study. Twenty respondents who reported that they returned a positive COVID-19 test and 20 who had COVID-19 like symptoms.

Conduct of the interviews

A semi-structured interview guide was used to explore people’s explanations for using antibiotics. The guide was developed based on an extensive review of research and review articles, viewpoints, opinion pieces, and letters to editors. The topic guide was reviewed by the research team and other colleagues with expertise in AMR and infectious diseases. Minor revisions were made according to their feedback. The interview guide was subsequently translated into Bengali. The first author compared the back-translated version with the original version to ensure that a uniformity of meaning between the two languages was achieved. The guide was then piloted with four participants by the first author; these data were not included in the analysis. In keeping with the iterative approach of qualitative research, new questions and areas of inquiry were included as the interviews progressed.

Each interview commenced with introductory questions regarding their current health status, history of chronic disease and COVID-19 infection, understanding COVID-19 infection, health seeking behavior, understanding on antibiotic use, motivators of antibiotic use, and sources of advice. Appropriate probing questions were asked followed by asking broader issues. Each interview lasted 35 to 80 minutes, and were audio-recorded with participants’ consent. The recordings were then transcribed verbatim in Bengali and anonymized. The first and second authors checked all transcripts against the audio recordings for accuracy and completeness.

Approach to analysis

An inductive, grounded theory approach [52] was followed to capture the themes from the interviewee’s explanations of consuming antibiotics in relation to their experience of COVID-19. The interviews were transcribed verbatim. A pseudonym was inserted in each of the anonymized transcripts, which were imported into MAXQDA Standard (2020, VERBI Software, Berlin, Germany) for data analysis. We first listened to the audio recordings and read each transcript to generate initial codes. We then used an inductive coding to analyze the materials. A primary list of codes was developed (by first and second author) and additional inductive codes were added as new insights emerged from the interviews. These codes were then organized into themes and sub-themes for the preparation of research article manuscripts.

Ethical considerations

Ethical approval of this study was obtained from Chattogram Veterinary and Animal Science University, Chattogram, Bangladesh (CVASU) Research Ethics Committee [approval number CVASU/Dir (R&E)/EC/2020/169(3)]. Prior to taking part in the interviews, participants were informed about the objectives of the research in order to make a well-informed decision as to whether or not they would like to participate. Verbal consent was obtained from the participants and it was recorded in a digitized audio recording prior to starting the guided discussions. Since the study conducted amid the social distancing, and other restrictions imposed to control the spread of the virus, the interviews were conducted over telephone. Therefore, obtaining a written consent was not feasible. The interviews were one-to-one in nature. However, the participants were given opportunity to withdraw from the study at any point, and were informed they that did not have to answer any questions or statements that made them uncomfortable. Identifiable information of the participants was removed during data analysis, and pseudonyms have been used in data reporting. Similarly, the brand names of the antibiotics were also anonymized (with XXX) as it might impact on general public and pharmaceutical companies negatively or positively.

Results

Characteristics of the study participants

Participant characteristics are outlined in Table 1. An equal number of interviews were conducted with female and male participants, and most (n = 31) participants were aged 24–40 years. The majority of participants had completed a university degree and most were involved with different public and private agency services. Most of the participants did not have any long-term health conditions. However, more than half of the participants had taken antibiotics in the past year.

Table 1. Characteristics of the study participants.

Characteristics of the participants Number (%)
Gender Male 20 (50)
Female 20 (50)
Age 24–30 15 (37.5)
31–40 16 (40)
41–50 9 (22.5)
Education MA/MSc/MSS 19 (47.5)
BA/BSc/BSS 14 (35)
12th grade 3 (7.5)
10th grade 4 (10)
Occupation Government service 12 (30)
Home maker 11 (27.5)
Private service 6 (15)
Student 5 (12.5)
Business 5 (12.5)
Priest 1 (2.5)
History of chronic disease Asthma 4 (10)
Diabetes 3 (7.5)
Cancer 1 (2.5)
No Chronic disease 32 (80)
Marital status Married 27 (67.5)
Single 8 (20)
Separated 1 (2.5)
Not mentioned 4 (10)
Average monthly income (USD) 60–235 6 (15)
236–470 12 (30)
471–705 9 (22.5)
706> 9 (22.5)
Not mentioned 4 (10)
Number of times antibiotics taken in last one year Not taken 19 (47.5)
One time 8 (20)
2–4 times 10 (25)
Could not recall 3 (7.5)

Thematic results

We identified five main themes in the interview accounts of using antibiotics during the COVID-19 pandemic: the attractions of big medicine; managing anxiety about COVID-19; social repercussions of symptoms, diagnosis and isolation; health systems and; sources of advice. Table 2 summarizes the major themes and sub-themes identified during data analysis.

Table 2. Thematic results at a glance.

Theme Sub-theme Explanation
1. Big medicine 1.1 Antibiotics are powerful medicine. Antibiotics are very powerful medicine. The higher the power is, the better they work, and fasten recovery. When the normal medicines do not work, antibiotics are given as final solution.
1.2 Immunity Immunity is important to fight against coronavirus. Antibiotics help to improve the immunity.
1.3 Secondary infection COVID-19 may cause secondary infection on respiratory tract system. Using antibiotics can prevent that perceived infection.
1.4 Pneumonia Patients with COVID-19 may suffer from pneumonia. Taking antibiotics can prevent pneumonia.
2. Managing emotions 2.1 Fear Fear of death and getting infected motivate people to use antibiotics.
2.2 Relief from mental stress Having COVID-19 like symptoms causes mental disturbance, anxiety and loss of mental strength. Antibiotics help to gain confidence by quick recovery of the symptoms.
2.3 Uncertainty of COVID-19 treatment Uncertainty due to the unavailability of proven therapeutics and vaccine to treat or prevent COVID-19. Hence, antibiotics is the only hope to cure fever, cough and throat itching.
3. Social repercussion of symptoms, diagnosis and isolation Patients with COVID-19 and COVID-19 like symptoms are being stigmatized. It is better use antibiotics rather being stigmatized socially.
4. Health system 4.1 Inaccessible health care services. It is better to consume antibiotics to reduce the symptoms as it is difficult to access to healthcare services from public and private health facilities amid the pandemic.
4.2 Difficulty in access to COVID-19 testing. Taking of antibiotic partly solved the problem of deep uncertainty about one’s coronavirus antibody status.
4.3 Pluralistic health services. Due to the biomedical ambiguity, people prefer to seek health services from other sources and consumed antibiotics by them.
5. Source of advice 5.1 Social capital. Getting advice from the recovered patients and other social network was acceptable as no proven therapeutic was available.
5.2 Social media Social media discussions on the (in)effectiveness of taking antibiotics was an influential driver to take antibiotics. A number of respondents reported influenced of social media post to consume antibiotics.
5.3 Medicine shop. People frequently consumed antibiotics based on pharmacy workers’ and owners’ suggestions.
5.4 Quack and non-human physicians Many respondents consumed antibiotics based on the suggestions from quacks and non-human physicians like vets.

“Big” medicine

Participants spoke of antibiotics as powerful drugs that accelerate recovery. They understood antibiotics as the ultimate solution to infection. In this example, Rahman (male, aged 26, who had COVID-19 symptoms) spoke of antibiotics as the ‘big boss’:

R: Because of cold and cough, I can barely sleep at night. At that time, the doctor prescribed me antibiotic. So that I come to a conclusion that when we do not get cured by taking general medicine to cure our disease, then doctor prescribe us antibiotic. Actually, antibiotic is the big boss.

I: What do you mean by big boss, can you please explain that to me?

R: As I have said, when any medicine does not work, antibiotic works at that time. When doctors find that after giving the medication still the condition of the patient is not improving, then they [doctors] depend on antibiotic. After giving antibiotics, the patient gets recovered. I have seen the same thing in my case too. I was not cured after taking many medicines. At last, I was suggested with antibiotic, I took antibiotic and get cured. That is why I called it ‘big boss’.

Rahman used the metaphor of “big boss” to capture what he saw as the healing powers of antibiotics. The fragment also makes reference to previous experiences with treatments to back up this view. These notions of antibiotic powers recurred in the interviews and were recognized as one reason why people sought them in the time of pandemic threat. In the following example, Taslima (female, aged 32, COVID-19 patient) noted that antibiotics are not used to treat COVID-19 but explained that people may seek them because they are the ‘biggest’ medicine:

In my knowledge, antibiotics should not be used for COVID-19. But recently, people are using XXX [brand name of antibiotics] along with other medicines. Now the question is why? Because, you know, it is popularly known that antibiotics are the biggest medicine and very powerful… When they [people] suffer from fever, throat ache, cold, pain or diarrhea people take antibiotics. People know that, antibiotics are useful.

Taslima took the observing position in her narrative and reported on the behavior of others, a common storytelling approach for topics that may cast doubt on the protagonist’s knowledge and judgement. Taslima’s narrator position is an important clue that some awareness exists that the unjustified use of antibiotics is not sanctioned by experts. The reputation of antibiotics as big medicine was echoed in talk about speedy recovery, another source of value for consumers. But some also linked this power with their COVID-19 outcomes; for example, Rafique (male, aged 27, COVID-19) explained:

I can tell you that it took six days to become negative from the day I got positive with COVID-19. I started using antibiotics on that day when I got my COVID-19 positive report. I also used other normal medicines along with azithromycin. In that case, using antibiotic helps me to recover fast. On the other hand, it took 15 days to get recovered from COVID-19 for my parents. They did not take antibiotics… I cannot be certain about this but this is my observation.

In this example, Rafique compared his own quick recovery with antibiotics with his parents’ experience of longer period of COVID-19 symptoms. This is another example of experience being used to justify the use of antibiotics, despite its inaccuracy. This interpretation suggests that the reputation of antibiotics is promoted through lack of knowledge about viruses, bacteria and antibiotics. Participants with COVID-19 like symptoms also frequently reported similar explanations. ‘Antibiotics are very powerful medicine’ and ‘when other medicines do not work well, antibiotics are used’ were frequently mentioned explanations for taking antibiotics.

Other participants interpreted symptoms as possible COVID-19 infection. These included fever, cough, sore throat, itchy throat and body ache. When participants noticed these symptoms, they started thinking that they may have the virus. According to Masum (male, aged 50, COVID-19 like symptoms):

Just before the nationwide lockdown, I was travelling to outside of Dhaka for an official purpose. On my return to Dhaka, I was suffering from throat ache and felt itching on my throat. Then I checked temperature and found 100-degree Celsius. I thought it was a seasonal flu. I took normal paracetamol along with a syrup for cough. But my condition was not improving. Then I got confused. As the COVID situation was getting worse day by day then, I assumed to have the virus, because these symptoms are common for coronavirus. I did not want to take risk with these symptoms. Then I took antibiotics and recovered from fever and throat ache and itching.

A set of explanations put forward the notion that antibiotics keep the immune system active and strong. Rahima (female, aged 26 and COVID-19) stated,

COVID-19 is not a bacterial disease; rather it is viral. Antibiotics do not work for viral disease but help to improve immunity. For this reason, I used antibiotics. You know, coronavirus impacts on whole body. Body cannot fight against the virus but if your immune system is strong then your body can fight against further damage caused by COVID-19.

Rahima justified the use of antibiotics to make the body fit to fight against the potential damage caused by SARS-CoV-2.

A few participants reported that antibiotics were given to prevent secondary infection and in case of pneumonia. The WHO advises that antibiotics are only be given to confirmed cases of secondary infection or pneumonia. In contrast, our participants’ explanations demonstrate people are taking antibiotics outside these guidelines. Sohel (41, patient with COVID-19) explained,

The aged people and people with previous disease [co-morbidity] are at higher risk to COVID. Their condition becomes severe on 7th or 8th day of infection. As COVID is a lung disease, there is huge chance to spread the virus into the whole respiratory system. As a result, a COVID patient may suffer from severe inhalation problem, which may cause further complications, even death. I did not want to have such complication. To prevent this complication, I took antibiotics.

Sohel’s explanation was typical of our interviewees. Antibiotics are justified as a means to avoid the progression of illness to severe debility and death. These explanations show that antibiotics’ reputations as powerful drugs lead people to seek them out after diagnosis or when they experience symptoms.

Managing emotions

Participants reported considerable anxiety and fear connected with the pandemic in general, their diagnosis and symptoms, and linked these emotions with antibiotics. They referred to fear of death, fear of getting infected with COVID-19, the extensive uncertainties regarding COVID-19 treatment, intensely negative emotions, and stress relation to social stigma. People who were tested positive for COVID-19 and those with COVID-19-like symptoms referred to these concerns, but with different nuances depending on their diagnosis. Sattar (male, aged 44, COVID-19 patient) spoke of antibiotics as a way to manage his anxiety,

Currently, people are getting anxious due to COVID-19. Nobody knows what to do if they got infected by the virus. I am also thinking in a similar manner. Therefore, I took antibiotics thinking that it would help me to reduce my fear. In my opinion, using antibiotics can help me to get rid of current worries.

The ‘big’ medicine reputation of antibiotics was therefore a source of some emotional relief, helping to explain why they may be sought out by patients despite not being clinically useful. One issue here is that from the patient’s point of view, antibiotics may appear to be effective, when an infection resolves of its own accord. For example, Nazma (female, aged 30, with COVID-like symptoms) spoke of her symptoms subsiding after she took antibiotics, which was linked with a more general concern to reduce her anxiety,

When I was suffering from fever and throat ache, I was afraid to be positive with COVID-19. Then I became aware by myself that I should not be sick. My primary symptoms told me that maybe I was positive. That was a kind of mental disturbance. But after taking antibiotics, I was confident about that I am not positive as my throat ache went away…. I was very tense, if I were positive then my family members will also be positive and I will be responsible for that. That feeling disturbed me a lot. For all these tensions and mental satisfaction, I took antibiotics.

Like Nazma suggested, having a diagnosed patient in the family home motivated some participants to take antibiotics. When a family member is diagnosed, other members are at risk, which appeared to generate some tension. In this situation, using antibiotics was reported to be a coping mechanism for reducing risk and therefore anxiety. Ruma (female, aged 40, with COVID-like symptoms), whose husband had been diagnosed with COVID-19, explained that situation,

My husband was tested positive with COVID. As I took care of him, my husband’s doctor also suspected that I may get the virus. I did not have all the symptoms but was suffering from weakness. But as my husband was positive, so I was guessing I might have the virus as well. For that reason, I also took his medicines. My husband brought antibiotics and other medicines. So I started taking all of his medicines.

Ruma’s comment also suggest that she ‘self-diagnosed’ by assessing her symptoms and proximity to someone who had been diagnosed. She also spoke of how antibiotics and other pharmaceuticals were shared between family members. Antibiotics are seen as powerful medicines and for that reason have psychological properties, particularly in the time of a life-threatening pandemic for which effective vaccines and treatments are not yet available.

Social repercussions of symptoms, diagnosis and isolation

A number of explanations from the people with COVID-19 like symptoms were linked with social stigma. As part of control and containment mechanisms, people with COVID-19 have to stay isolated, maintain quarantine, and are not permitted to go to communal places. Misunderstanding isolation and quarantine was a source of social rejection and vilification, which meant that the illness had social costs that had to be avoided. Nasrin (female, aged 29, with COVID-like symptoms) explained the situation in following way:

The COVID patients are being isolated socially. We have also seen COVID patients are being harassed socially. Their families are suffering a lot by the neighbors. Their electricity and water connection cut, they cannot even collect their daily needs. Children abandoned their aged parents. I have seen such cases in television and newspaper. Considering these, I was aware of these and I was strict to be healthy. To avoid all these complications and problems, I took antibiotics to show that I am not sick.

Nasrin’s interview showed a key social driver of antibiotic use in the time of pandemic are the social sanctions on people with the virus. We can surmise too that these dynamics may reduce testing for COVID-19 and accentuate self-diagnosis and self-treatment. Morshed (male, aged 30, with COVID-like symptoms) provided a picture of some distress due to an uncontrollable cough and its impact in social settings,

I was suffering from cough and fever. I discussed a local quack [unprofessional prescriber] near to my home. I told her that I am coughing a lot when I travel and in the office. When you have cough, you cannot control it. Now people are more concern about coughing and sneezing in the public. I tried to control it but could not. People would have looked at me differently… so I did not want to take that risk. I shared my problem with that doctor and asked what should I do? Then she suggested me to take antibiotics to prevent the COVID and get cured from coughing. Now I am feeling good, by the grace of Allah.

As in many other examples in the interviews, antibiotics solved symptoms, negative emotions and threats to social standing. The effects of antibiotics were almost magical since they erased these problems, even though they were not impacting on the virus or the infection-related symptoms which may have resolved of its own accord. We can see, then, how antibiotics gain their reputations as powerful medicines as they indeed have many powers in the eyes of people who use them.

Inaccessible COVID-19 testing and healthcare services

Another set of descriptions corresponded with the difficulty accessing COVID-19 testing and health care services. While both participant groups frequently mentioned difficulty in getting access to treatment from government hospitals, those with COVID-19 like symptoms were more likely to consider antibiotics as an alternative to the COVID-19 test. The following explanation of this situation came from Sharmin (female, aged 36 years), a patient with COVID-19 like symptoms,

Before taking antibiotics, I was suffering from fever and throat ache. I did not do my COVID test. It is difficult to test in Chittagong, as the number of laboratories for COVID tests is very limited. People cannot do test if they want to do so. It takes 3 or more days to get seen for a test and then it requires another 2 or 3 days to get reports. So, for me, doing test is very difficult and a hassle. I did not bother to do the test. At that time, I thought it would be better to use antibiotics, so that I can recover myself from fever and throat ache.

Like many other patients with COVID-19 symptoms, Sharmin was motivated to use antibiotics as she was not able to do the test. In this context, using antibiotics stood in for the COVID-19 test or bypassed it. In this way, the antibiotic partly solved the problem of deep uncertainty about one’s coronavirus status. However, access to general and COVID-19 specific health services remained difficult for many of our research participants. Consequently, people had to rely on home-based care services they organize themselves. As Zahir (male, aged 28 years, with COVID-like symptoms) stated,

When I was suffering from fever and cough, I was thinking about my wife. Last month when my wife was suffering from another disease, I took her to the hospital. I saw people suffering because they could not get general treatments. The doctors and nurses were feeling worried if they would get infected by the patients. The hospitals even were not admitting new patients. The hospital where I took my wife made the COVID test mandatory, otherwise they would not admit patients. Now everyone is not able to do the test. So, people had to go home [without taking treatment]. Seeing these situations, I thought many people may die at home, and not from COVID. I was thinking, if I suffer from any other diseases, maybe I cannot get proper treatment. So, to be healthy, I took antibiotics.

Sources of advice

Another set of explanations for antibiotic use was linked with pluralistic health care and healing systems. The thematic analysis revealed that participants relied on the experience and advice of a wide range of variously qualified people from their social worlds, including recovered patients, social networks, professional doctors, veterinarians, and ‘quacks’. The following explanation showed how Rokhsana (female, aged 34), herself a recovered COVID-19 patient, was motivated to use antibiotics through the example of a friend who had recovered,

One of my acquaintances tested positive with coronavirus. She was suffering from fever, cough and throat ache. When her condition was not improved, she took antibiotics. Her condition improved rapidly after taking antibiotics. When I was tested positive, I called her and she suggested me to take antibiotics. She suggested me to take one tablet in the morning and another at night. Three days later (of taking antibiotics) my fever and throat ache went away. I took antibiotics based on her suggestion, as she recovered from COVID-19, I thought she could be an ideal source how to manage.

A large number of participants reported that they had used antibiotics based on the suggestion from medical practitioners. Although their doctors did not explain why antibiotics were to be used, they cited such advice in their justifications. The following explanation from Rubel (male, aged 42, with COVID-19) depicted this situation,

I cannot tell you detail why I used antibiotics. When I was tested positive, a doctor from a government hospital called me. He asked me about my health condition. I told him in detail. Then he suggested few medicines. While buying those medicines I came to know there was a medicine of antibiotic group. I used those medicine as the doctor suggested.

Excessive prescription of antibiotics has been considered as a key driver of AMR, so it is unknown why doctors are prescribing antibiotics to home-based patients for treating COVID-19. In general, high antibiotic prescription by medical doctors has been reported in Bangladesh [23]. Rubel’s account indicates that inconsistent application of antibiotic use guidance leads to some confusion among consumers.

A number of explanations indicated that people in participants’ social networks influenced them to take antibiotics when they found themselves to have COVID-19 or symptoms. Taukir (male, aged 32), a patient with COVID-19, stated,

I cannot say in detail about the benefits of using antibiotics… I heard from my personal networks; antibiotics are very helpful for COVID. Hearing from my personal network, I also felt that, using antibiotics would improve my condition. Nothing else, you know people do not take medicine for fun. Usually, I avoid using medicine for simple illness. As there’s no specific treatment for COVID-19, I took antibiotics and found them effective and that’s why using antibiotics is becoming popular.

In addition, some research participants mentioned that their antibiotic use decisions were motivated by social media, including those with COVID-19 and COVID-19 like symptoms. For example, Hanufa (female, aged 31, with COVID-19) used antibiotics based on social media post. According to her,

I got know from the social media about taking antibiotics. I saw many Facebook posts discussing how antibiotics are useful for COVID. I can talk about one post of my close friend where she was saying antibiotics will help to you feel comfortable, at-least for throat ache. My husband [was also a COVID patient] also saw other posts. Then me and my husband started using.

During the COVID-19 crisis, social media appear to play a significant role in disseminating (mis)information about how to manage symptoms and use antibiotics. In the context of fragmented or non-existent access to testing and diagnosis services in Bangladesh, social media messages may take a central role in the self-care decisions of people affected by the pandemic.

The interviews also revealed that a smaller number of participants took antibiotics based on suggestions from veterinary doctors. Although the vets were not supposed to suggest antibiotics for use in human health, during the pandemic crisis they have been considered to be sources of expert advice. For example, Jahanara (female, aged 29, with COVID-19) explained,

I took antibiotics based on my neighbor’s suggestion. He is a veterinary doctor. He completed DVM from CVASU [Chittagong Veterinary and Animal Science University] … as he has expertise on animal medicine, I thought his suggestion for taking antibiotic is appropriate. Like humans, animals also need antibiotics.

Similar explanations were observed from the five participants who used antibiotics based on advice from ‘quacks’, who are non-medical persons who work as assistants to professional doctors. These participants explained that quacks are trusted because they are perceived to be up-to-date with current recommendations for the treatment of COVID-19.

Discussion

This exploratory study has documented the key drivers for using antibiotics among people in Bangladesh in a time when the world is facing an unpreceded health crisis due to COVID-19. The study has revealed that popular norms regarding the powers of antibiotics, psychosocial crises due to the pandemic, humoral understandings of health, social repercussions of symptoms, diagnosis and isolation, inaccessible COVID-19 testing and multiple sources of advice and expert knowledge all played important roles.

Antibiotics were understood to be effective when other medicines do not reduce the symptoms of COVID-19, including fever, throat itching, body ache, diarrhea, cold cough and smelling sensation. Humoral understandings [31] such as ‘antibiotics are powerful’, ‘final solution’ and ‘antibiotics are big boss’ significantly motivated patients and undiagnosed people to use antibiotics when they experienced COVID-19 like symptoms. This is an extension of people’s pre-pandemic health management practices which highlight understandings of antibiotic and antibiotic use that differ from biomedical perspectives according to socio-economic status and cultural context [31, 43]. Moreover, the explanations offered in our research, underline how people make sense of their health according to their social, cultural and prior experiences [5355], perhaps most keenly in the time of pandemic. As is evident in this study, participants prioritized the symptoms of COVID-19 above biomedical knowledge regarding the prudent use of antibiotics, a finding which is aligned with an anthropological study in India [56].

While discussing their motivations for using antibiotics during COVID-19, study participants indicated that the cultural meaning of ‘rational use’ from consumers’ perspective is different from the top-down, expert-led approach [42, 43]. Respondents’ explanations demonstrated how these decisions were considered responses to the psychological and social repercussions of COVID-19 infection and symptoms, inaccessible COVID-19 testing, social media influences and efforts to avoid secondary co-infection. Each sub-theme showed that taking antibiotics helped individuals to cope with the physical and psychosocial stressors of life during the pandemic. Concern about the mental health challenges among the general population, COVID-19-infected patients, close contacts, elderly, children and health professionals has emerged as one of the pandemic’s ‘hidden’ impacts [57]. In the pre-pandemic era, a number of studies reported that people with greater psychological distress and lower self-efficacy report high levels of intention to use antibiotics [5860]. Mental health strains caused by confusion and uncertainty around COVID-19 treatment and delay in finding a proven vaccine may also contribute to the use of antibiotics amid this pandemic [12, 61].

While antibiotics are popularly known as ‘big medicines’ that work to cure infections [20, 34, 62], the current study has also revealed that antibiotics are used to prevent the potential of secondary infection, such as pneumonia, caused by coronavirus infection. The explanations we examined indicated that participants understand the potential for secondary infections and use antibiotics of their own accord or based on the advice of various ‘experts’, despite the ‘inappropriateness’ of such practice [43]. This prophylactic use of antibiotics aligns with Nichter’s (2001) work which showed that sex workers in the Philippines routinely used antibiotics before and after sex to prevent potential bacterial infection, and the use of antiviral treatments to prevent HIV infection [63]. Antibiotics are widely used in clinical settings with(out) clinical confirmation of lung infection [64], which may be partially responsible for the antibiotic prophylaxis among patients in home settings.

The social repercussions of COVID-19 symptoms, diagnosis and isolation were additional drivers for choosing antibiotics. Study participants explained that people diagnosed with COVID-19 and COVID-19 like symptoms were socially stigmatized, leading patients to experience neglect, marginalization, and ostracization, as has been observed for other pandemics and outbreaks [6569] which amplify hate, discrimination, chaos, fear, and violence. As antibiotics are considered ‘magic drugs’ that can hasten recovery, the consumption of antibiotics helps individuals to avoid these daunting social repercussions of COVID-19. In addition to the reputation of antibiotics and psychosocial considerations, our analysis showed how antibiotic use is embedded in the structures of the health system. Uneven access to testing and weak public health systems infrastructure, in general, are considered major factors for the spread of COVID-19 in LMICs [18, 19]. Our respondents showed how these factors led some to consume antibiotics, with some noting that antibiotics provided some assurance for the mitigation of infection in the absence of a COVID-19 test. This insight is important because it points to the health system drivers of antibiotic consumption and therefore AMR.

In addition, recommendations from sources within the pluralistic health system were also linked with accounts of taking antibiotics. Literature on the pre-pandemic era shows that inappropriate prescription practices by physicians was one of the major drivers of antibiotic use [23, 25]. This driver was also discussed by the participants of our study. A recent study in Zimbabwe showed that antibiotics are seen by the frontline prescribers as a ‘big gun’, ‘thick bleach’ and ‘cover’ for novel diseases [70]. As COVID-19 is a relatively new disease, this ‘big medicine’ reputation of antibiotics might influence inappropriate practices of antibiotics by the prescribers. In addition, our study participants relied on alternative medical services, in particular, popular sector (e.g., COVID-19 survivor), non-medical providers (quacks), and veterinary doctors. This reliance on experts outside the human health system echoes anthropological literature on the significance of multiple healing systems in LMIC contexts [43, 56]. For most of our study participants, suggestions from recovered patients within their social network were important for their decisions about treatment, medicine and care for COVID-19. Social media are commonly seen as important methods for raising AMR awareness [71, 72]. However, our study participants were influenced by social media, particularly Facebook, to use antibiotics for COVID-19, indicating an urgent need to provide easily accessible advice online to moderate these influences.

This explanatory research has some limitations that apply to the findings. First, it was conducted in two major urban areas with highly dense populations that may not be representative of the whole of Bangladesh, particularly rural areas. However, the current study covered the most affected areas in terms of number of COVID-19 cases. Second, study participants were mostly highly educated and of similar economic backgrounds, which may reflect the recruitment strategies (network sampling and Facebook). Nevertheless, it is worth understanding ‘higher educated’ people’s perspective on antibiotic use during COVID-19 as it is assumed people with higher education group perform better in terms appropriate use of antibiotics. Finally, due to the nature of the research approach, the study was conducted among people with COVID-19 and COVID-19 like symptoms who received care in home settings, while hospital-based patients were excluded. Our findings provide insights for further investigations of COVID-19 related antibiotic use in hospital settings.

Conclusion and recommendations

AMR researchers, advocates and public health specialists have been concerned about the observed increased use of antibiotics during the COVID-19 pandemic [1, 73, 74]. Our study offers some important insights into the mechanisms and drivers of the use of antibiotics in Bangladesh during the pandemic. We were able to document the key social, cultural and psychological properties of antibiotics that help to explain why they are sought out in a time of health crisis, even amongst those who recognize that antibiotics cannot treat viral infections. We also shed light on the health systems and social media drivers of antibiotic use, in time of crisis. The study demonstrates that effective interventions for AMR awareness will need to do more than simply provide information. They will need to assist members of the general public to take action to safeguard their health while also moderating the use of antibiotics. Messaging will need to acknowledge the reputation of antibiotics and their socio-pharmacological value, and help people to understand how antibiotics can be used to best effect and to reduce AMR. Our research also indicates that national strategy for AMR reduction will also have to address health system drivers of AMR and social media influences. The lessons that the pandemic has provided about the drivers of antibiotic use are important in the short term as public health systems across the world seek out ways through the health crisis. Our analysis is also valuable in the longer term because, without strong action, the AMR challenge will continue and deepen, in part due to the impact of COVID-19. Moreover, the advent of the pandemic and its impact on AMR are important considerations for the public health response to future pandemics. The study strongly recommends further research on clinical usage of antibiotics, physicians’ theory of practice while prescribing antibiotics, the role of pharmaceuticalisation, and multidisciplinary political and policy analyses of antimicrobial use in the pandemic context in Bangladesh and beyond.

Supporting information

S1 File. Interview guide.

(DOCX)

S2 File. Supplementary file.

(DOCX)

Acknowledgments

We would like to thank the research participants who gave their valuable time and took participate in the study voluntarily. We also thank to Chattogram Veterinary and Animal Science University for giving ethical approval of this study. The authors also thank to the RAs who conducted all interviews. The authors acknowledge with particular gratitude the anonymous reviewers who offered detailed and helpful comments on the manuscript.

Data Availability

All relevant data are within the paper and its Supporting information files.

Funding Statement

This work is partially funded by Bangladesh Bureau of Educational Information and Statistics (BANBEIS), ID number SD2019967. Mohammad Mahmudul Hassan was supported by BANBEIS. The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.

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Decision Letter 0

Monica Cartelle Gestal

29 Sep 2021

PONE-D-21-18370Understanding Antibiotic Consumption Amongst Individuals with COVID-19 or Symptoms: Implications for Antimicrobial Resistance in BangladeshPLOS ONE

Dear Dr. Kalam,

Thank you for submitting your manuscript to PLOS ONE. After careful consideration, we feel that it has merit but does not fully meet PLOS ONE’s publication criteria as it currently stands. Therefore, we invite you to submit a revised version of the manuscript that addresses the points raised during the review process.

==============================

During the revision process while you address the reviewers comments, please revise the format of your manuscript. It needs to follow Plos One guidelines, so please pay attention to the guidelines.Also, the names listed on the manuscript could create conflict and a potential breach in patient confidentiality, please use codes instead names.

==============================

Please submit your revised manuscript by Nov 13 2021 11:59PM. If you will need more time than this to complete your revisions, please reply to this message or contact the journal office at plosone@plos.org. When you're ready to submit your revision, log on to https://www.editorialmanager.com/pone/ and select the 'Submissions Needing Revision' folder to locate your manuscript file.

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We look forward to receiving your revised manuscript.

Kind regards,

Monica Cartelle Gestal, PhD

Academic Editor

PLOS ONE

Journal requirements:

When submitting your revision, we need you to address these additional requirements.

1. Please ensure that your manuscript meets PLOS ONE's style requirements, including those for file naming. The PLOS ONE style templates can be found at

https://journals.plos.org/plosone/s/file?id=wjVg/PLOSOne_formatting_sample_main_body.pdf and

https://journals.plos.org/plosone/s/file?id=ba62/PLOSOne_formatting_sample_title_authors_affiliations.pdf.

2. Please amend your current ethics statement to address the following concerns: 

a) Did participants provide their written or verbal informed consent to participate in this study?

b) If consent was verbal, please explain i) why written consent was not obtained, ii) how you documented participant consent, and iii) whether the ethics committees/IRB approved this consent procedure.

3. When reporting the results of qualitative research, we suggest consulting the COREQ guidelines  or other relevant checklists listed by the Equator Network, such as the SRQR, to ensure complete reporting (http://journals.plos.org/plosone/s/submission-guidelines#loc-qualitative-research). Moreover, please provide the interview guide used as a Supplementary File

4. Thank you for stating the following in the Acknowledgments Section of your manuscript:

“We also grateful to Bangladesh Bureau of Educational Information and Statistics for providing partial funding (ID#SD2019967) to this study.”

We note that you have provided funding information that is not currently declared in your Funding Statement. However, funding information should not appear in the Acknowledgments section or other areas of your manuscript. We will only publish funding information present in the Funding Statement section of the online submission form.

Please remove any funding-related text from the manuscript and let us know how you would like to update your Funding Statement. Currently, your Funding Statement reads as follows:

“This work is partially funded by Bangladesh Bureau of Educational Information and Statistics (BANBEIS), ID number SD2019967. Mohammad Mahmudul Hassan was supported by BANBEIS.”

Please include your amended statements within your cover letter; we will change the online submission form on your behalf.

5. In your Data Availability statement, you have not specified where the minimal data set underlying the results described in your manuscript can be found. PLOS defines a study's minimal data set as the underlying data used to reach the conclusions drawn in the manuscript and any additional data required to replicate the reported study findings in their entirety. All PLOS journals require that the minimal data set be made fully available. For more information about our data policy, please see http://journals.plos.org/plosone/s/data-availability.

Upon re-submitting your revised manuscript, please upload your study’s minimal underlying data set as either Supporting Information files or to a stable, public repository and include the relevant URLs, DOIs, or accession numbers within your revised cover letter. For a list of acceptable repositories, please see http://journals.plos.org/plosone/s/data-availability#loc-recommended-repositories. Any potentially identifying patient information must be fully anonymized.

Important: If there are ethical or legal restrictions to sharing your data publicly, please explain these restrictions in detail. Please see our guidelines for more information on what we consider unacceptable restrictions to publicly sharing data: http://journals.plos.org/plosone/s/data-availability#loc-unacceptable-data-access-restrictions. Note that it is not acceptable for the authors to be the sole named individuals responsible for ensuring data access.

We will update your Data Availability statement to reflect the information you provide in your cover letter.

6. We note that you have indicated that data from this study are available upon request. PLOS only allows data to be available upon request if there are legal or ethical restrictions on sharing data publicly. For more information on unacceptable data access restrictions, please see http://journals.plos.org/plosone/s/data-availability#loc-unacceptable-data-access-restrictions.

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b) If there are no restrictions, please upload the minimal anonymized data set necessary to replicate your study findings as either Supporting Information files or to a stable, public repository and provide us with the relevant URLs, DOIs, or accession numbers. For a list of acceptable repositories, please see http://journals.plos.org/plosone/s/data-availability#loc-recommended-repositories.

We will update your Data Availability statement on your behalf to reflect the information you provide.

7. Your ethics statement should only appear in the Methods section of your manuscript. If your ethics statement is written in any section besides the Methods, please delete it from any other section.

Additional Editor Comments (if provided):

[Note: HTML markup is below. Please do not edit.]

Reviewers' comments:

Reviewer's Responses to Questions

Comments to the Author

1. Is the manuscript technically sound, and do the data support the conclusions?

The manuscript must describe a technically sound piece of scientific research with data that supports the conclusions. Experiments must have been conducted rigorously, with appropriate controls, replication, and sample sizes. The conclusions must be drawn appropriately based on the data presented.

Reviewer #1: Yes

Reviewer #2: Yes

Reviewer #3: Partly

**********

2. Has the statistical analysis been performed appropriately and rigorously?

Reviewer #1: N/A

Reviewer #2: N/A

Reviewer #3: I Don't Know

**********

3. Have the authors made all data underlying the findings in their manuscript fully available?

The PLOS Data policy requires authors to make all data underlying the findings described in their manuscript fully available without restriction, with rare exception (please refer to the Data Availability Statement in the manuscript PDF file). The data should be provided as part of the manuscript or its supporting information, or deposited to a public repository. For example, in addition to summary statistics, the data points behind means, medians and variance measures should be available. If there are restrictions on publicly sharing data—e.g. participant privacy or use of data from a third party—those must be specified.

Reviewer #1: No

Reviewer #2: Yes

Reviewer #3: No

**********

4. Is the manuscript presented in an intelligible fashion and written in standard English?

PLOS ONE does not copyedit accepted manuscripts, so the language in submitted articles must be clear, correct, and unambiguous. Any typographical or grammatical errors should be corrected at revision, so please note any specific errors here.

Reviewer #1: Yes

Reviewer #2: Yes

Reviewer #3: No

**********

5. Review Comments to the Author

Please use the space provided to explain your answers to the questions above. You may also include additional comments for the author, including concerns about dual publication, research ethics, or publication ethics. (Please upload your review as an attachment if it exceeds 20,000 characters)

Reviewer #1: Overall a fascinating manuscript where the study is well done and the topic is extremely relevant to the current twin pandemics of AMR and COVID.

Major critique:

1. Authors mention that antibiotic use has gone up in during COVID. However, that is not true globally as many outpatient facilities in the US have actually seen a decrease in antibiotic prescription (in the US as eg. https://academic.oup.com/cid/advance-article/doi/10.1093/cid/ciaa1896/6054971). So would recommend stating that and then commenting that unfortunately the overuse of antibiotics is worse in developing countries that already have a high burden of covid and a future increased burden of AMR would cripple the healthcare systems further.

2. The authors only make a cursory mention of inappropriate prescription practices by physicians. Since this was bought up by the participants as well, I would recommend discussing this in more detail using pre-pandemic literature as well.

3. How did the authors confirm that antibiotics were indeed being used by their participants? For eg. did they ask them for specific names of the prescriptions? Many times people use the term 'antibiotic' generally for any medicine where even ibuprofen is considered an antibiotic. Also would recommend mentioning which antibiotics the participants identified either using of getting prescribed.

4. The authors have used first names of participants. Please use First and Last initials to maintain confidentiality. Also would recommend adding age and gender to the initials. Eg. state MA (26yrs Female) said 'xxxx....'.

Minor critique:

Page 4 (line 89-91): sentence should be rephrased to increase clarity

Page 5 paragraph titled "COVID-19 situation and response in Bangladesh' seems oddly placed. Consider moving it prior to the previous paragraph (lines 96-104)

Page 6 line 134: Is that the total number of COVID cases in Bangladesh at the time? Please clarify. Also 'Residents both in cities' is a typo.

Reviewer #2: This is a very interesting and well written qualitative study of antibiotic use among people with COVID-19 positive test or symptoms in Bangladesh. This was a fascinating read and I very much appreciate the authors’ work. I have a few comments mostly meant for clarification.

1. Introduction – It would be helpful to provide a citation for the statements in the first two sentences (lines 45-48).

2. Introduction, Line 55 – typo in “…related mortality” (rather than morality)

3. Study setting, Line 133 – might want to clarify that the 70.6% and 14.1% figures are % shares of total number of cases, not a population prevalence of COVID (e.g., 70% of the population of Dhaka does not have COVID at any given time).

4. Study participants – was there a timeframe during which participants had to have tested positive for COVID and/or were symptomatic? Rather than listing gender/age as an inclusion criteria, I would note separately that purposeful sampling was used (or something, whatever is accurate) to ensure an even distribution of gender and age.

5. The inclusion criteria state that taking antibiotics in the last 12 months was an inclusion criterion, but the table 1 characteristics state that 19 participants hadn’t taken antibiotics in the last year. Was past-year antibiotic use a criterion for inclusion in this study?

6. I think Table 1 and associated results text should be in the results of the paper, not the methods. Additionally, it would be helpful to revise Table 1 into a more standard format with one row per characteristic (rather than two columns with characteristics), include both Ns and % of the population, etc. In general, I would use standard section headings (Introduction, Methods, Results, Discussion) and sub-headings within each of those broader categories (e.g., for Study Participants).

7. Were there participants in the sample who had not taken antibiotics for COVID? Were there any themes or results emerging from these interviews?

Reviewer #3: - The title of the manuscript should be edited to better reflect the outcomes of this study. What do you mean by "Symptoms" in the title? It should be COVID-19-like symptoms...

- The English writing of the manuscript needs proofreading.

- How the authors diagnosed COVID-19 infection? This should be clearly explained.

- What types of antibiotics were consumed by patients? and for how long?

- Were there any secondary bacterial infections? if yes, which infections?

- The format of Tables needs edition.

- The structure of manuscript is somehow strange. I do not know it is in the format of journal. For example, findings instead of Results!!!

- The limitations of the study should be mentioned in the discussion.

- The following article fully explained the AMR situation during COVID-19 pandemic. Cite it in the Introduction or Discussion part.

doi: 10.3389/fmicb.2020.590683

"Antimicrobial Resistance as a Hidden Menace Lurking Behind the COVID-19 Outbreak: The Global Impacts of Too Much Hygiene on AMR"

Front Microbiol. 2020; 11: 590683.

**********

6. PLOS authors have the option to publish the peer review history of their article (what does this mean?). If published, this will include your full peer review and any attached files.

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Reviewer #1: No

Reviewer #2: No

Reviewer #3: No

[NOTE: If reviewer comments were submitted as an attachment file, they will be attached to this email and accessible via the submission site. Please log into your account, locate the manuscript record, and check for the action link "View Attachments". If this link does not appear, there are no attachment files.]

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PLoS One. 2021 Dec 14;16(12):e0261368. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0261368.r002

Author response to Decision Letter 0


22 Oct 2021

October 7, 2021

Dear Academic Editor,

We are pleased to provide a revised manuscript entitled: Understanding the Social Drivers of Antibiotic Use During COVID-19 in Bangladesh: Implications for Reduction of Antimicrobial Resistance. The title has been revised as per suggested by respected reviewer. We thank the reviewers for their overall enthusiasm for the study and their constructive comments, which have allowed us to improve the manuscript significantly.

We have responded to each of their comments, as detailed below. Our manuscript has even more relevance at a time when the world is experiencing a severe pandemic, and there are lot of anxiety and tensions around antibiotics use. Therefore, studying social drivers of antibiotics use, this study provides insight that will inform health policy across different countries including Bangladesh.

We look forward to the review of our revised manuscript and hope that it is now considered acceptable for publication in PLoS One.

Sincerely,

Md. Abul Kalam.

Specific responses to academic editor and reviewers:

Journal requirements:

When submitting your revision, we need you to address these additional requirements.

Comment 1. Please ensure that your manuscript meets PLOS ONE's style requirements, including those for file naming. The PLOS ONE style templates can be found at

https://journals.plos.org/plosone/s/file?id=wjVg/PLOSOne_formatting_sample_main_body.pdf and

https://journals.plos.org/plosone/s/file?id=ba62/PLOSOne_formatting_sample_title_authors_affiliations.pdf.

Response: Thank you very much. The draft meets the style requirements of the journal.

Comment 2. Please amend your current ethics statement to address the following concerns:

a) Did participants provide their written or verbal informed consent to participate in this study?

Response: Yes. Verbal consent was obtained from all participants.

Comment b) If consent was verbal, please explain i) why written consent was not obtained, ii) how you documented participant consent, and iii) whether the ethics committees/IRB approved this consent procedure.

Response: Thank you for your concern. We obtained verbal consent in the two stages. At first, the study leads made communication with the potential respondents to explain the study purpose, research objectives and nature of participation. At this stage the study leads got verbal consent and provided a suitable time for the interview. Once a potential participant agreed to participate in the study, the Research Assistants then called them to conduct the interview. Before starting the interview, the research assistants again received informed consent verbally. The verbal consent was audio recorded with permission of the participant before starting the discussion. Since the study was conducted amid strict restrictions due to COVID-19 (such as travel restriction, ban of transportations and physical distancing), it was not possible to obtain written consent. Considering this, the Ethics Committee has agreed on obtaining verbal consent. Please check the process in the Ethical consideration section; line 208-212.

3. When reporting the results of qualitative research, we suggest consulting the COREQ guidelines or other relevant checklists listed by the Equator Network, such as the SRQR, to ensure complete reporting (http://journals.plos.org/plosone/s/submission-guidelines#loc-qualitative-research ). Moreover, please provide the interview guide used as a Supplementary File.

Response: We followed COREQ guideline while reporting the results. Please check line number 138-139 in the methodology section. Please find the filled-up checklist form in S2 File. The interview guide has been provided as Supplementary File. Please check S1 File.

Comment 4. Thank you for stating the following in the Acknowledgments Section of your manuscript:

“We also grateful to Bangladesh Bureau of Educational Information and Statistics for providing partial funding (ID#SD2019967) to this study.”

We note that you have provided funding information that is not currently declared in your Funding Statement. However, funding information should not appear in the Acknowledgments section or other areas of your manuscript. We will only publish funding information present in the Funding Statement section of the online submission form.

Please remove any funding-related text from the manuscript and let us know how you would like to update your Funding Statement. Currently, your Funding Statement reads as follows:

“This work is partially funded by Bangladesh Bureau of Educational Information and Statistics (BANBEIS), ID number SD2019967. Mohammad Mahmudul Hassan was supported by BANBEIS.”

Please include your amended statements within your cover letter; we will change the online submission form on your behalf.

Response: Thanks for your suggestion. We have removed the funding information from the acknowledgement section. Please check line number 572-573.

Comment 5. In your Data Availability statement, you have not specified where the minimal data set underlying the results described in your manuscript can be found. PLOS defines a study's minimal data set as the underlying data used to reach the conclusions drawn in the manuscript and any additional data required to replicate the reported study findings in their entirety. All PLOS journals require that the minimal data set be made fully available. For more information about our data policy, please see http://journals.plos.org/plosone/s/data-availability.

Upon re-submitting your revised manuscript, please upload your study’s minimal underlying data set as either Supporting Information files or to a stable, public repository and include the relevant URLs, DOIs, or accession numbers within your revised cover letter. For a list of acceptable repositories, please see http://journals.plos.org/plosone/s/data-availability#loc-recommended-repositories. Any potentially identifying patient information must be fully anonymized.

Important: If there are ethical or legal restrictions to sharing your data publicly, please explain these restrictions in detail. Please see our guidelines for more information on what we consider unacceptable restrictions to publicly sharing data: http://journals.plos.org/plosone/s/data-availability#loc-unacceptable-data-access-restrictions . Note that it is not acceptable for the authors to be the sole named individuals responsible for ensuring data access.

We will update your Data Availability statement to reflect the information you provide in your cover letter.

Response: Thanks so much for pointing this out. Following COREQ checklist, we have provided minimal data set as the supplementary file 2: S2 File

Comment 6. We note that you have indicated that data from this study are available upon request. PLOS only allows data to be available upon request if there are legal or ethical restrictions on sharing data publicly. For more information on unacceptable data access restrictions, please see http://journals.plos.org/plosone/s/data-availability#loc-unacceptable-data-access-restrictions .

In your revised cover letter, please address the following prompts:

a) If there are ethical or legal restrictions on sharing a de-identified data set, please explain them in detail (e.g., data contain potentially sensitive information, data are owned by a third-party organization, etc.) and who has imposed them (e.g., an ethics committee). Please also provide contact information for a data access committee, ethics committee, or other institutional body to which data requests may be sent.

b) If there are no restrictions, please upload the minimal anonymized data set necessary to replicate your study findings as either Supporting Information files or to a stable, public repository and provide us with the relevant URLs, DOIs, or accession numbers. For a list of acceptable repositories, please see http://journals.plos.org/plosone/s/data-availability#loc-recommended-repositories.

We will update your Data Availability statement on your behalf to reflect the information you provide.

Response: Thanks so much for pointing this out. We have updated the data availability statement.

7. Your ethics statement should only appear in the Methods section of your manuscript. If your ethics statement is written in any section besides the Methods, please delete it from any other section.

Response: Thanks so much. We have mentioned it only in the methodology section.

Additional Editor Comments (if provided):

[Note: HTML markup is below. Please do not edit.]

Reviewers' comments:

Reviewer's Responses to Questions

Comments to the Author

1. Is the manuscript technically sound, and do the data support the conclusions?

The manuscript must describe a technically sound piece of scientific research with data that supports the conclusions. Experiments must have been conducted rigorously, with appropriate controls, replication, and sample sizes. The conclusions must be drawn appropriately based on the data presented.

Reviewer #1: Yes

Reviewer #2: Yes

Reviewer #3: Partly

________________________________________

2. Has the statistical analysis been performed appropriately and rigorously?

Reviewer #1: N/A

Reviewer #2: N/A

Reviewer #3: I Don't Know

________________________________________

3. Have the authors made all data underlying the findings in their manuscript fully available?

The PLOS Data policy requires authors to make all data underlying the findings described in their manuscript fully available without restriction, with rare exception (please refer to the Data Availability Statement in the manuscript PDF file). The data should be provided as part of the manuscript or its supporting information, or deposited to a public repository. For example, in addition to summary statistics, the data points behind means, medians and variance measures should be available. If there are restrictions on publicly sharing data—e.g. participant privacy or use of data from a third party—those must be specified.

Reviewer #1: No

Reviewer #2: Yes

Reviewer #3: No

________________________________________

4. Is the manuscript presented in an intelligible fashion and written in standard English?

PLOS ONE does not copyedit accepted manuscripts, so the language in submitted articles must be clear, correct, and unambiguous. Any typographical or grammatical errors should be corrected at revision, so please note any specific errors here.

Reviewer #1: Yes

Reviewer #2: Yes

Reviewer #3: No

________________________________________

5. Review Comments to the Author

Please use the space provided to explain your answers to the questions above. You may also include additional comments for the author, including concerns about dual publication, research ethics, or publication ethics. (Please upload your review as an attachment if it exceeds 20,000 characters)

Reviewer #1: Overall a fascinating manuscript where the study is well done and the topic is extremely relevant to the current twin pandemics of AMR and COVID.

Response: Thank you so much for your appreciation on the merit our manuscript. Many thanks for your time and efforts that you made to review our paper. We have responded and made necessary changes based on your critical comments, questions and suggestions.

Major critique:

1. Authors mention that antibiotic use has gone up in during COVID. However, that is not true globally as many outpatient facilities in the US have actually seen a decrease in antibiotic prescription (in the US as eg. https://academic.oup.com/cid/advance-article/doi/10.1093/cid/ciaa1896/6054971 ). So would recommend stating that and then commenting that unfortunately the overuse of antibiotics is worse in developing countries that already have a high burden of covid and a future increased burden of AMR would cripple the healthcare systems further.

Response: Thanks so much for providing this insight with reference. We have now updated the introduction section with this information. Please check line number 48-51.

Comment 2. The authors only make a cursory mention of inappropriate prescription practices by physicians. Since this was bought up by the participants as well, I would recommend discussing this in more detail using pre-pandemic literature as well.

Response: Thanks so much for you suggestion. We have now elaborated this aspect in the discussion section. Please check line number 521-526.

Comment 3. How did the authors confirm that antibiotics were indeed being used by their participants? For eg. did they ask them for specific names of the prescriptions? Many times, people use the term 'antibiotic' generally for any medicine where even ibuprofen is considered an antibiotic. Also, would recommend mentioning which antibiotics the participants identified either using of getting prescribed.

Response: We agree with your comment. As we mentioned in the methodology section, the lead researchers had an initial discussion with the potential respondents before enrolling the study. At that time, the potential participants were asked the names of the medicines they consumed. All the participants mentioned the brand names of the antibiotics. One researcher correlated these brand names with type (group) of antibiotics. When any participant failed to mention the name and the brand name did not match with the type of human antibiotics, they were excluded from the study. Please check this explanation in the methodology section, line number 156-160. In regards to the name of antibiotics, as mentioned earlier, participants mentioned the brand name. We are not interested to use these names because, these may impact on the readers or to the specific pharmaceuticals negatively or positively.

Comment 4. The authors have used first names of participants. Please use First and Last initials to maintain confidentiality. Also would recommend adding age and gender to the initials. Eg. state MA (26yrs Female) said 'xxxx....'.

Response: Thanks so much for your concern and suggestion. The names we used throughout the paper, were pseudonyms. We used pseudonyms because we promised to the IRB committee and participants not to reveal their names in anywhere of the paper. Please check line number 194-196 in the methodology section.

Minor critique:

Comment Page 4 (line 89-91): sentence should be rephrased to increase clarity

Response: Thanks so much for your suggestion. We have made necessary edits for clarification. Please check line number 95 to 97 in the revised version.

Comment Page 5 paragraph titled "COVID-19 situation and response in Bangladesh' seems oddly placed. Consider moving it prior to the previous paragraph (lines 96-104)

Response: Thank you so much for your suggestion. Given the long introduction section with an extensive literature on AMR problem globally and LMICS settings, we wanted to provide a better understanding to the readers on twin burdens of COVID-19 and AMR. Then we wanted to give a background on the country context of COVID-19 and Government’s response. This section will help readers to correlate our results on structural drivers, specifically, how health systems might improvise participants’ decision to take antibiotics. Therefore, we want to stick on the current form.

Comment Page 6 line 134: Is that the total number of COVID cases in Bangladesh at the time? Please clarify. Also 'Residents both in cities' is a typo.

Response: Thanks so much for your comment. Yes, according to the official statistics, 141,801 were total number of clinically confirmed cases at the time of data collection in Bangladesh. We have now made it clear. Please check line number 144-146 in the revised version.

We have now replaced that 'Residents both in cities' with ‘potential participants’. Please check line number 146 in the revised version.  

Reviewer #2: This is a very interesting and well written qualitative study of antibiotic use among people with COVID-19 positive test or symptoms in Bangladesh. This was a fascinating read and I very much appreciate the authors’ work. I have a few comments mostly meant for clarification.

Response: Thanks so much for your overall enthusiasm to read the paper critically and providing feedbacks, we believe, that will help to improve its clarity. In the following, we have clarified and made necessary changes based on your comments, suggestions and questions.

Comment 1. Introduction – It would be helpful to provide a citation for the statements in the first two sentences (lines 45-48).

Response: Thanks for your suggestion. We have provided citation for these statements in the revised draft. Please check line 48-51 (citation 1-3) in the revised version.

Comment 2. Introduction, Line 55 – typo in “…related mortality” (rather than morality)

Response: Made corrections accordingly. Please check line 59 in the revised version.

Comment 3. Study setting, Line 133 – might want to clarify that the 70.6% and 14.1% figures are % shares of total number of cases, not a population prevalence of COVID (e.g., 70% of the population of Dhaka does not have COVID at any given time).

Response: Thanks so much for raising this confusion. We have now revised it. Please check line number 143 to 146 in the revised version.

Comment 4. Study participants – was there a timeframe during which participants had to have tested positive for COVID and/or were symptomatic?

Response: No, we did not put any timeline for that. Since the study was conducted between May to June and the pandemic officially started from March in Bangladesh, we can assume that, the participants included in the study had COVID-19 and suggestive symptoms between this timeframe.

Comment Rather than listing gender/age as an inclusion criterion, I would note separately that purposeful sampling was used (or something, whatever is accurate) to ensure an even distribution of gender and age.

Response: Thanks so much for your suggestion. We have made necessary changes in the methodology section. Please see line number 153 in the revised version.

Comment 5. The inclusion criteria state that taking antibiotics in the last 12 months was an inclusion criterion, but the table 1 characteristics state that 19 participants hadn’t taken antibiotics in the last year. Was past-year antibiotic use a criterion for inclusion in this study?

Response: Thanks so much for pointing out this. It was a typo. We have now made changes. Please see line number 150 in the revised version.

Comment 6. I think Table 1 and associated results text should be in the results of the paper, not the methods. Additionally, it would be helpful to revise Table 1 into a more standard format with one row per characteristic (rather than two columns with characteristics), include both Ns and % of the population, etc.

Response: Thanks for your suggestion. We have now moved table 1 down to the result section after making suggested changes. Please check in the result section.

Comment In general, I would use standard section headings (Introduction, Methods, Results, Discussion) and sub-headings within each of those broader categories (e.g., for Study Participants).

Response: Necessary changes have made accordingly throughout.

Comment 7. Were there participants in the sample who had not taken antibiotics for COVID? Were there any themes or results emerging from these interviews?

Response: Thanks so much for your question. As we wanted to explore social drivers of antibiotic consumption among individuals who had been tested positive with COVID-19 and had suggestive symptoms of COVID-19, we did not include those who had COVID-19 and suggestive symptoms but did not consume antibiotics. By inclusion criteria, we excluded these individuals.

Reviewer #3:

Comment - The title of the manuscript should be edited to better reflect the outcomes of this study. What do you mean by "Symptoms" in the title? It should be COVID-19-like symptoms...

Response: Thank you very much for your suggestion. The title of the manuscript has been modified and changed accordingly. Please check the revised version.

Comment - The English writing of the manuscript needs proofreading.

Response: Thanks so much for your suggestion. The draft has been reviewed by two native English speakers who are authors (Dr Narelle Warren and Dr Mark Davis – affiliated with Monash University, Australia) in the paper.

Comment - How the authors diagnosed COVID-19 infection? This should be clearly explained.

Response: Thanks so much for your suggestion. We have explained it in the methodology section. Please check line number 156-160 in the revised version.

Comment - What types of antibiotics were consumed by patients? and for how long?

Response: Thanks so much for your questions. Prior to enrolling the participants, the participants were asked to mention the name of antibiotic they consumed. It was asked as part of inclusion criteria. As the main objective of the current paper is to offer social drivers of antibiotic consumption, we decided not focus on adherence behaviours in this paper. Moreover, given the diversified practices on adherence of practices, we may develop another paper on adherence.

Comment - Were there any secondary bacterial infections? if yes, which infections?

Response: Thanks so much for your question. Unfortunately, we did not want to understand whether they had secondary infection or not. However, the secondary infection was brought up by the participants. What we mentioned in the draft was derived from the participants’ narratives, mostly from their perception. Since by criteria, all of the participants took home care, there was no clinical evidence on the type of secondary infection. As our main purpose was to explore the social drivers, we reported it as perceived secondary infection.

Comment - The format of Tables needs edition.

Response: We have made necessary edits on the tables. Please check the revised version.

Comment - The structure of manuscript is somehow strange. I do not know it is in the format of journal. For example, findings instead of Results!!!

Response: The structure of the draft has been changed throughout.

Comment - The limitations of the study should be mentioned in the discussion.

Response: The limitation section was as part of the discussion section in the primary draft. However, we have specified it. Please check line number 537-547.

Comment- The following article fully explained the AMR situation during COVID-19 pandemic. Cite it in the Introduction or Discussion part.

doi: 10.3389/fmicb.2020.590683

"Antimicrobial Resistance as a Hidden Menace Lurking Behind the COVID-19 Outbreak: The Global Impacts of Too Much Hygiene on AMR"

Front Microbiol. 2020; 11: 590683.

Response: Thanks for your suggestion. This is worth citing. We have cited it in the Introduction section. Please check citation number 2.

________________________________________

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Reviewer #2: No

Reviewer #3: No

Attachment

Submitted filename: Reviewers Comments and responses_Final.docx

Decision Letter 1

Monica Cartelle Gestal

1 Dec 2021

Understanding the Social Drivers of Antibiotic Use During COVID-19 in Bangladesh: Implications for Reduction of Antimicrobial Resistance.

PONE-D-21-18370R1

Dear Dr. Kalam,

We’re pleased to inform you that your manuscript has been judged scientifically suitable for publication and will be formally accepted for publication once it meets all outstanding technical requirements.

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Academic Editor

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Reviewers' comments:

Reviewer's Responses to Questions

Comments to the Author

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Reviewer #2: All comments have been addressed

Reviewer #3: All comments have been addressed

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Reviewer #3: Yes

**********

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Reviewer #3: I Don't Know

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Reviewer #2: Yes

Reviewer #3: Yes

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Good luck with your paper

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Acceptance letter

Monica Cartelle Gestal

3 Dec 2021

PONE-D-21-18370R1

Understanding the Social Drivers of Antibiotic Use During COVID-19 in Bangladesh: Implications for Reduction of Antimicrobial Resistance.

Dear Dr. Kalam:

I'm pleased to inform you that your manuscript has been deemed suitable for publication in PLOS ONE. Congratulations! Your manuscript is now with our production department.

If your institution or institutions have a press office, please let them know about your upcoming paper now to help maximize its impact. If they'll be preparing press materials, please inform our press team within the next 48 hours. Your manuscript will remain under strict press embargo until 2 pm Eastern Time on the date of publication. For more information please contact onepress@plos.org.

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Kind regards,

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on behalf of

Dr. Monica Cartelle Gestal

Academic Editor

PLOS ONE

Associated Data

    This section collects any data citations, data availability statements, or supplementary materials included in this article.

    Supplementary Materials

    S1 File. Interview guide.

    (DOCX)

    S2 File. Supplementary file.

    (DOCX)

    Attachment

    Submitted filename: Reviewers Comments and responses_Final.docx

    Data Availability Statement

    All relevant data are within the paper and its Supporting information files.


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