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South African Dental Journal
On-line version ISSN 0375-1562Print version ISSN 0011-8516
S. Afr. dent. j. vol.78 n.9 Johannesburg Oct. 2023
LETTER TO THE EDITOR
S AhmedI; RZ AdamII; R CoetzeeIII
IBChD, PDD, MSc, Senior Lecturer, Department of Prosthodontics, Faculty of Dentistry, University of the Western Cape, South Africa. ORCID: 0000-0001-8174-6928
IIBChD, MSc, PhD, Associate Professor, Deputy Dean: Research, Faculty of Dentistry, University of the Western Cape, South Africa. ORCID: 0000-0002-2645-9878
IIIPharm.D, Associate Professor, School of Public Health, University of the Western Cape, South Africa ORCID: 0000-0002-8779-3458
I refer to your editorial in the SADJ April 2022 77(3), and wish to highlight the need of the dental profession to take heed of rising antimicrobial resistance rates, and to focus on modifying their prescribing practices in an effort to mitigate this global crisis.
To understand and contribute to antibiotic stewardship, it is important that dental practitioners, including dental students, have the necessary knowledge of correct antibiotic prescribing guidelines and antimicrobial resistance. The overuse and misuse of antibiotics have contributed to the rise of antimicrobial resistance worldwide, with dentistry playing a part in the rise of antimicrobial resistance globally.
As a result of incorrect and overuse of antibiotics, many of these antimicrobial agents have become ineffective against simple infections.1 When managing pain and swelling in dentistry, the correct diagnosis and eradication of oral infection forms an essential part of the dental treatment plan and the use of antibiotics should be limited as most dental infections respond well to clinical operative intervention.2,3
Dental outpatient antibiotic prescriptions and hospital inpatient prescriptions account for the most commonly prescribed medications, with dentists accountable for about 10% of all antibiotics prescribed globally.4 Prescription of antibiotics in a dental setting for therapeutic and prophylactic measures is determined by specific clinical criteria. The guidelines and criteria for antibiotic prescribing in dentistry is explicitly stated in various guidelines published globally.5,6
Recent studies have assessed students' knowledge, attitudes and compliance to antibiotic prescribing guidelines and habits. Many of these studies have highlighted that although a large portion of students correctly prescribed according to antibiotic guidelines followed at their dental school, there was also a significant portion of dental students' knowledge that was inadequate. This highlighted the need of curriculum redesign.7,8,9
In South Africa, there is very little evidence about how the dental curricula fulfil antibiotic prescribing and antibiotic stewardship. The reality is that a dental student may never receive additional training on antibiotic stewardship following graduation, so it is imperative that appropriate undergraduate training be conducted.
The dental profession has a responsibility to contemplate the consequences of their antibiotic prescribing choices, as the effect on both the patient and community carries a risk. The dental profession (including dental students) in South Africa can play a valuable role in antibiotic stewardship by prescribing antibiotics judiciously and appropriately and ultimately contribute to decreasing antimicrobial resistance rates and preserving the effectiveness of antibiotics for future generations.
Could it be time to evaluate the undergraduate curriculum to ensure competency amongst dental practitioners when it comes to antibiotic prescribing guidelines?
REFERENCES
1. Sukumar S, Martin FE, Hughes TE, Adler CJ, 2020. Think before you prescribe: how dentistry contributes to antibiotic resistance. Australian Dental Journal, 65(1), pp.21-29 [ Links ]
2. Yu J, Nie EM, Jiang R, Zhang CY, Li X, 2020. Analgesic and antibiotic prescription pattern among dentists in Guangzhou: a cross-sectional study. Pain Research and Management, 2020, pp.1-6 [ Links ]
3. Walsh LJ, Ford PJ, McGuire T, van Driel M, Hollingworth SA, 2021. Trends in Australian dental prescribing of antibiotics: 2005-2016. Australian dental journal, 66 pp.S37-S41 [ Links ]
4. Thompson W, Teoh L, Hubbard CC, Marra F, Patrick DM, Mamun A, Campbell A, Suda KJ, 2022. Patterns of dental antibiotic prescribing in 2017: Australia England, United States, and British Columbia (Canada). Infection Control & Hospita Epidemiology, 43(2), pp.191-198 [ Links ]
5. Teoh L, Thompson W, Suda K, 2020. Antimicrobial stewardship in dental practice The Journal of the American Dental Association, 151(8), pp.589-595 [ Links ]
6. Goff DA, Mangino JE, Glassman AH, Goff D, Larsen P, Scheetz R, 2020. Review of guidelines for dental antibiotic prophylaxis for prevention of endocarditis and prosthetic joint infections and need for dental stewardship. Clinical Infectious Diseases, 71(2), pp.455-462 [ Links ]
7. Thanissorn C, Park JS, Wang KN, Tennant M, Page AT, Kruger E. Australian denta students' knowledge on antibiotics prophylaxis for dental procedures. BMC Ora Health. 2022 Dec 23;22(1):633 [ Links ]
8. AboAlSamh A, Alhussain A, Alanazi N, Alahmari R, Shaheen N, Adlan A. Denta students' knowledge and attitudes towards antibiotic prescribing guidelines in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. Pharmacy. 2018 May 7;6(2):42 [ Links ]
9. Struzycka I, Mazinska B, Bachanek T, Boltacz-Rzepkowska E, Drozdzik A Kaczmarek U, Kochanska B, Mielczarek A, Pytko-Polonczyk J, Surdacka A, Tanasiewicz M. Knowledge of antibiotics and antimicrobial resistance amongst fina year dental students of Polish medical schools - A cross-sectional study. European Journal of Dental Education. 2019 Aug;23(3):295-303 [ Links ]
Correspondence:
Name: Dr S Ahmed
Tel: (021) 937 3091 / 082 537 5827
Email: suahmed@uwc.ac.za