Socio-economic factors, cultural values, national personality and antibiotics use: A cross-cultural study among European countries

There are considerable cross-national differences in public attitudes towards antibiotics use, use of prescribed antibiotics, and self-medication with antibiotics even within Europe. This study was aimed at investigating the relationships between socio-economic factors, cultural values, national per...

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Main Authors: Ümmügülsüm Gaygısız (Author), Timo Lajunen (Author), Esma Gaygısız (Author)
Format: Book
Published: Elsevier, 2017-11-01T00:00:00Z.
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Summary:There are considerable cross-national differences in public attitudes towards antibiotics use, use of prescribed antibiotics, and self-medication with antibiotics even within Europe. This study was aimed at investigating the relationships between socio-economic factors, cultural values, national personality characteristics and the antibiotic use in Europe. Data included scores from 27 European countries (14 countries for personality analysis). Correlations between socio-economic variables (Gross National Income per capita, governance quality, life expectancy, mean years of schooling, number of physicians), Hofstede's cultural value dimensions (power distance, individualism, masculinity, uncertainty avoidance, long-term orientation, indulgence), national personality characteristic (extraversion, neuroticism, social desirability) and antibiotic use were calculated and three regression models were constructed. Governance quality (r = −.51), mean years of schooling (r = −.61), power distance (r = .59), masculinity (r = .53), and neuroticism (r = .73) correlated with antibiotic use. The highest amount of variance in antibiotic use was accounted by the cultural values (65%) followed by socio-economic factors (63%) and personality factors (55%). Results show that socio-economic factors, cultural values and national personality characteristics explain cross-national differences in antibiotic use in Europe. In particular, governance quality, uncertainty avoidance, masculinity and neuroticism were important factors explaining antibiotics use. The findings underline the importance of socio-economic and cultural context in health care and in planning public health interventions. Keywords: Antibiotic, Cultural values, Personality characteristics, Socio-economic factors
Item Description:1876-0341
10.1016/j.jiph.2016.11.011