Novel Approach to Collect Ethiopian Voices on Community Antibiotic Use
Our solution will tap into Ethiopia’s community level knowledge, attitude, and practice regarding antibiotics, antibiotic use. Using digital approaches and face-to-face interviews, our solution collects antibiotic use data (humans and animals) and use novel antibiotic photo-identification app to develop interactive and impactful educational radio programs with SMS text message polling.
Dr. Wondwossen Gebreyes, Executive Director of The Ohio State University Global One Health initiative. Dr. Gebreyes is a veterinarian trained in Ethiopia and an expert in antimicrobial resistance.
- Innovation
- Integration
- Implementation
In Ethiopia, antibiotics are available without prescription and used indiscriminately. While antimicrobial resistance is commonly reported, the scale of community use of antibiotics, including falsified antibiotics, is very limited. The Ethiopian Food and Drug Authority (EFDA) regulates and approves all antibiotics that are manufactured in Ethiopia and imported into the country legally. The illegal antibiotics often lack sufficient effective antibiotic agents and cause more harm to human and animal by delaying improvement and causing potential death. We do not know the scale illegal antibiotic use for humans or animals. Our solution brings together existing demographic health survey system and implement a novel mobile technology application to collect community level antibiotic use data in humans and food animals. This data will be used to develop an integrated radio programming that addresses key gaps in community knowledge. We emphasize the dangers of falsified antibiotic use in human and veterinary medicine using integrated One Health approach. We will use the data to develop materials that will be instrumental in arming the public with knowledge and awareness. The data will provide regulators and key stakeholders with information that has never been gathered in Ethiopia enabling them to address challenges through various follow-up programs.
The primary target audience we are working to help are the community members. We will be increasing community wide knowledge about the need for antibiotics, antibiotics, antimicrobial resistance, method of antibiotic purchase, and collecting data knowledge, attitude and practice (KAP) including use and mis/use of antibiotics, health seeking behavior, and actual antibiotic consumed. We aim to empower community members with knowledge leading to less wasted money on falsified antimicrobials and in support of their health.
We will also share the key insights from the collected data back to the participants. The app will match the antibiotic photo and inform the consumer if the antibiotic is on the Ethiopian Federal Drug Administration (EFDA) approved list. The app will also provide antibiotic drug information such as side effects, use in pregnancy, etc.
Other target audiences include pharmacists and veterinary medicine dispensers, with focal group SMS chat groups, to gain information on KAP such as antimicrobial prescription practice, antimicrobial stewardship, and antibiotic accessibility.
The information gathered from the community will also be provided to government ministries such as EFDA and policy makers to inform them the results of KAP, antibiotic use/access and areas of focus for intervention solutions.
- Pilot: A project, initiative, venture, or organisation deploying its research, product, service, or business/policy model in at least one context or community