Worldwide strategies to control antibiotic resistance and its consequences (mortality, costs) are being developed, but are currently insufficiently, as for example demonstrated in the unchanged European consumption rates of antibiotics during the last years (RAND, 2016).
Completed project
Preliminary studies have shown that Complementary and Alternative Medicine (CAM) practices and hospitals have lower antibiotic prescription rates and lower resistance rates compared to conventional practices based on additional prevention and treatment of infections strategies.
In order to offer conventional physicians a safe and effective alternative to antibiotics and to reduce misprescribing and overprescribing of antibiotics broadly, the available practical expertise and scientific knowledge on CAM strategies must be explored and systemized. The working group will collect available information on the use of CAM strategies regarding the use and prescription of alternatives to antibiotics in The Netherlands, France, Germany, England and Switzerland. The Working Group will further focus on the development of an evidence and expertise based decision-making tool for (conventional) doctors and the implementation of this tool in the European countries.
Network partners
- Erik W. Baars, University of Applied Sciences Leiden, Netherlands (Coordinator)
This network includes 9 partners, please click on the following link to see complete network composition: Network composition Appropriate use of antibiotics: the role of CAM treatment strategies
Project resources
Reduction of antibiotic use by IM and T&CM
Publications
- Evidence-based Complementary and Alternative Medicine, 2019. The Contribution of Complementary and Alternative Medicine to Reduce Antibiotic Use: A Narrative Review of Health Concepts, Prevention, and Treatment Strategies
- BMJ Open, 2018. Do NHS GP surgeries employing GPs additionally trained in integrative or complementary medicine have lower antibiotic prescribing rates? Retrospective cross-sectional analysis of national primary care prescribing data in England in 2016