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Social Determinants of Antibiotic Prescribing in China PDF

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UCLA UCLA Electronic Theses and Dissertations Title Social Determinants of Antibiotic Prescribing in China Permalink https://escholarship.org/uc/item/6bd7k6xr Author Wang, Nan Publication Date 2017 Peer reviewed|Thesis/dissertation eScholarship.org Powered by the California Digital Library University of California ABSTRACT OF THE DISSERTATION Social Determinants of Antibiotic Prescribing in China by Nan Wang Doctor of Philosophy in Sociology University of California, Los Angeles, 2017 Professor John Heritage, Co-chair Professor Tanya J. Stivers, Co-chair Antibiotic over-prescribing and bacterial resistance is one of the biggest public health crises in the world today. Despite high prescription rates and growing resistance rates in China, our understanding of the contributors to the problem is still lacking. The existing literature has mostly concluded that antibiotic over-prescription is a supply-side problem driven by physicians’ financial incentives; however, the role of demand-side factors has been largely neglected and unattended to. This dissertation is motivated by this gap. Using a community-based and cross-sectional survey, I examined caregivers’ pre-visit behavior and attitudes regarding antibiotics for children’s common cold symptoms. The results showed that 38% of the respondents used non-prescribed oral antibiotics before they visited ii physicians, and this behavior was not only associated with their desires for physicians’ antibiotic prescriptions, but also with them receiving antibiotics during the medical visit. To understand the process of antibiotic prescribing in medical interactions, I used Conversation Analysis to investigate physician-caregiver communication behavior in pediatric encounters. The results revealed that, first, compared to the American pediatric context, caregivers not only advocated for antibiotic treatment more overtly in Chinese context, but also did so more frequently (9% vs. 54%); second, physicians did not promote antibiotics enthusiastically – although antibiotics were prescribed 59% of the time, they were initially recommended by physicians 40% of the time; in addition, when examining the effect of caregivers’ treatment advocacy on physicians’ prescriptions, it was found that caregivers’ overt advocacy for antibiotics increased the likelihood of physicians’ prescriptions by over 9 times (OR=9.23, 95% CI: 3.30-33.08), and the effect was particularly strong on IV drip antibiotic prescriptions (OR=14.03, 95% CI: 5.77-38.70). In conclusion, this dissertation has revealed that demand-side factors played an important role in antibiotic over-prescribing in China. Contrary to the prevailing theory that over-prescribing is a supply-side problem, I found that physicians’ prescribing behavior was significantly influenced by caregiver treatment advocacy during the medical visit. Based on the findings, I recommended that first, regulations of non-prescribed antibiotics should be strictly enforced; second, health education campaigns about the rational use of antibiotics can be implemented among key population groups; and third, physicians can be given training in communication skills for resisting caregiver treatment advocacy. iii The dissertation of Nan Wang is approved. Donald E. Morisky Hongyin Tao Stefan Timmermans John Heritage, Committee Co-chair Tanya J. Stivers, Committee Co-chair University of California, Los Angeles 2017 iv v vi LIST OF TABLES & FIGURES Table 1-1. Social health insurance programs 10 Table 1-2. Rural three-tier health delivery network 15 Table 1-3. Urban three-tier hospital-based delivery system 17 Table 1-4. Service provision distribution in urban three-tier hospitals 18 Table 2-1. Socio-demographic Characteristics of Respondents 44 Table 2-2. Visit-related Characteristics 45 Table 2-3. Self-medication Before the Visit 46 Table 2-4. Caregiver Desires for the Visit 47 Table 2-5. Prescribing Decisions 47 Table 2-6. Effect of Caregiver Desires for Antibiotic Prescriptions on Antibiotic Prescriptions 49 Table 2-7. Predictors of Caregiver Use of Non-Prescribed Antibiotics Before Medical Visits 53 Table 2-8. Predictors of Caregiver Desires for Antibiotic Prescriptions 54 Table 2-9. Predictors of Caregiver Desires for IV Drip Antibiotic Prescriptions 55 Table 3-1. Caregiver Overt Advocating Actions for Antibiotic Treatment 78 Table 3-2. Type of Antibiotic Treatment Being Advocated For 79 Table 3-3. Local Sequential Placement of Overt Advocating Actions 124 Table 3-4. Global Sequential Placement of Overt Advocating Actions 126 Table 3-5 Prescribing Outcomes 128 Table 3-6. Test statistics for use of advocating action vs. prescribing outcome 129 Table 3-7. Test statistics of use of advocating action vs. prescribing outcomes 130 Table 4-1. Type of treatment Initially recommended by physicians 145 Table 4-2. Type of treatment Initially recommended by physicians 147 Table 4-3. Type of Treatment Initially Recommended & Ultimately Prescribed by Physicians 147 Table 4-4. Physicians' treatment recommendation actions 150 Table 4-5. Physicians' treatment recommendation actions & treatment recommended 151 Table 4-6. Caregiver-initiated discussions of treatment plans 175 Table 4-7. Physicians' responses to caregiver overt advocacy for antibiotic treatment 177 Table 4-8. Physicians' treatment recommendation actions & treatments being recommended 179 Table 4-9. Treatment recommendation actions and caregiver responses 180 Table 4-10. Type of treatment being recommended and caregivers' responses 180 Table 4-11. Physicians’ treatment recommendation actions and prescribing outcome 181 Table 4-12. Type of treatment being recommended and prescribing outcome 181 Table 4-13. Initiator of treatment discussion and prescribing outcome 182 Table 4-14. Caregiver-initiation of discussion about antibiotics and prescribing outcome 183 Table 4-15. Caregiver-initiation of discussion about drip antibiotics and prescribing outcome 183 Table 4-16. Effect parameters of physician-caregiver actions on antibiotic prescriptions 185 Table 4-17. Effect parameters of physician-caregiver actions on IV drip antibiotic prescriptions 186 Figure 2-1. The indirect and direct effects of X and M on Y. 50 vii ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS I would like to thank Professor John Heritage and Professor Tanya Stivers for their extraordinary guidance and selfless support throughout this project. I would like to thank Donald Morisky, Hongyin Tao, and Stefan Timmermans for their expert advice and kind encouragement in this dissertation process. I am grateful for the brilliant insights and comments from Steven Clayman, Jennie Brand, Ka-Yuet Liu, and Wei Zhang at various stages of this project. Thank you to my colleagues Clara Bergen, Alexandra Tates, Caroline Tietbohl, Ruey-Ying Liu, Amanda McArthur, Amelia Hill, Saskia Maltz, Keith Cox, Luis Manuel Olguin, Anne White, Laura Loeb, Lisa Kietzer, Chase Raymond, and Matthew Fox for constantly helping me and inspiring me. My sincere thanks also go to all the people who have agreed to participate in this project and the research staff who have assisted in data transcribing and data entry. viii VITA Education University of California, Los Angeles • C.Phil. in Sociology Awarded 06/2015 • MA in Sociology Awarded 06/2013 City University of Hong Kong • M.Phil in Applied Linguistics Awarded 01/2011 Jiangsu University • BA in English Awarded 06/2008 Fellowships and Grants University of California, Los Angeles • Dorothy L. Meier Dissertation Fellowship, UCLA Department of Sociology, 2017-2018, 2016-2017 • Travel Grant for the 55th Annual Meeting of the Association of Computational Linguistics (ACL), NSF, 2017 • Travel Grant for ACL WiNLP Workshop, ACL Organizing Committee, 2017 • Graduate Fellowships, UCLA Department of Sociology, 2011-2012, 2016 • STAR Award for Student Presenter, International Communication Association, Fukuoka, Japan, 2016 • Departmental Summer Research Award, UCLA Department of Sociology, 2013-2014, 2015-2016 • Department Summer Travel Grant, UCLA Department of Sociology, 2015-2016 • Summer Research Fellowship, UCLA Center for Chinese Studies, 2013-2014 • Chancellor’s Prize, UCLA Graduate Division, 2011-2012, 2012-2013 • UC System Pacific Rim Research Grant Finalist, UC System, 2012-2013 City University of Hong Kong • Outstanding Academic Performance Award, Chow Yei Ching Graduate School, 2009-2010 • Graduate Fellowships and Stipends, Chow Yei Ching Graduate School, 2009-2010, 2008-2009 • Research Fieldtrip Grant, Chow Yei Ching Graduate School, 2009-2010 Jiangsu University • National Award for Outstanding Undergraduates, 2008 • University Award for Outstanding Academic Performance 2007-2008, 2006-2007, 2005-2006 Academic Publications • Wang, N. (2017). Negotiation of Antibiotic Treatment in Medical Consultations: A Corpus-based Study. Proceedings of the 55th Annual Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics - Student Research Workshop. • Wang, N., Song, Y. (2017). What Does an Effective Treatment Recommendation Look Like: A Corpus-based Study on Doctor-Patient Conversation. Proceedings of the 55th Annual Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics - WiNLP Workshop. • Morisky, D. & Wang, N. (2017). Medication adherence. Paper accepted in Oxford Online Bibliography-Public Health. • Chantal, B., Marsen, S., Wang, N., & Yang, Y. (Submitted). Decentering the analysis: the authority of spectators, journalists and others, in-progress chapter in edited book by Nicolas Bencherki, Frédérik Matte, & François Cooren: How to analyze power and authority in interaction, Routledge. Academic Presentations (selected) • Wang, N. (2016). Is China’s antibiotic overuse problem driven by physicians’ financial incentives? Presentation at Health Working Group, UCLA Department of Sociology, Los Angeles, USA, Feb. 5, 2016. ix • Wang, N., and Yang, Y. (2016). Analyzing authority and power in interaction: a case analysis of one Q-A adjacency pair using Conversation Analysis. Paper presented at the preconference workshop at the International Communication Association Conference, Fukuoka, Japan, June 9, 2016. 
 • Yang, Y., and Wang, N. (2016). Analyzing authority and power in interaction: promise of and cautions from ethnography of communication. Paper presented at the preconference workshop at the International Communication Association Conference, Fukuoka, Japan, June 9, 2016. 
 • Wang, N., Stivers, T., and Heritage, J. (2015). Patient-related factors to antibiotic overuse in China: Self- medication, desires for antibiotics, and use of IV drip. Paper presented at the roundtable session of the American Sociological Association (ASA) 2015 Annual Meeting, Chicago, USA, 2015. 
 • Wang, N. (2014). Patient lobbying practices in pediatric visits. Paper presented at the 4th International Conference on Conversation Analysis, Los Angeles, USA, June, 2014. 
 • Wang, N. (2013). Doctor-patient relationship and medical care system in the U.S. Brownbag talk at the Institute of Economics, Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, Beijing, China, Sept. 11, 2013. 
 • Wang, N. (2013). Making requests in doctors’ office: data from Chinese pediatric interactions. Paper presented at the theme session on Conversation Analysis and Multi-modality in Chinese Interaction, International Cognitive Linguistics Conference (ICLC2013), Edmonton, Canada, June, 2013. 
 • Wang, N. (2012). Maximizing patients’ input in medical consultations: a study of patient initiation in Chinese pediatric interaction. Paper presented in the 3rd Annual Public Conference on Multilingualism in Institutional Contexts, Los Angeles, USA, November, 2012. 
 • Wang, N. (2012). Preliminaries to prescribing: the sequential organization of prescription decisions in Chinese pediatric consultations. Invited talk in Conversation Analysis Working Group, UCLA Department of Sociology, Los Angeles, USA, Nov. 18, 2012. 
 • Wang, N., and Zhang, W. (2009). Physician-parent interaction in treatment decision in a pediatric department in a mainland China hospital. Paper presented at Frontiers in Medical and Health Science Education 2009: Making Sense in Communication, Hong Kong, December, 2009. 
 Teaching Experiences University of California, Los Angeles • SOCIOL158 Talk & Social Institutions • SOCIOL111 Social Networks Analysis • SOCIOL1 Introductory Sociology City University of Hong Kong • CTL5408 Sociolinguistics • CTL2203 Language & Society • CTL2209 Introduction to Language Studies Academic Services • Co-coordinator | Conversation Analysis Working Group, UCLA Department of Sociology, 2016-2017 • Graduate student mentor | Honors Thesis Program, UCLA Department of Sociology, 2016-2017 • Student committee member | Graduate Program Admissions Committee, UCLA Department of Sociology, 2016 • Volunteer | CLIC Conference, UCLA Center for Language, Interaction, and Culture, 2015-2016 • Reviewer | CLIC-GSA Conference, UCLA Center for Language, Interaction, and Culture, 2015-2016 • Volunteer | 4th International Conference on Conversation Analysis, Los Angeles, 2014 • Volunteer | CLIC Conference, UCLA Center for Language, Interaction, and Culture, 2013-2014 Member of Society • The Association for Computational Linguistics (ACL) • International Society for Conversation Analysis (ISCA) • American Sociological Association (ASA) x

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Summer Research Fellowship, UCLA Center for Chinese Studies, 2013-2014 Student committee member | Graduate Program Admissions Committee, UCLA Department of Sociology, 2016 . insurance system, such as orthopedic hospitals, eye hospitals, or dental hospitals (C. Wu et al., 2013).
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