College students,shared decision making,and the appropriate use of antibiotics for respiratory tract infections: A systematic literature review |
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Authors: | Kristina Blyer Linda Hulton |
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Affiliation: | 1. Student Health Center, James Madison University, Harrisonburg, Virginia, USAblyerkb@jmu.edu;3. Department of Nursing, James Madison University, Harrisonburg, Virginia, USA |
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Abstract: | ABSTRACTObjective: This systematic review examines shared decision making to promote the appropriate use of antibiotics for college students with respiratory tract infections. Participants/Methods: CINAL, Cochrane, PubMed, EBSCO, and PsycNET were searched in October 2014 using the following criteria: English language, human subjects, peer-reviewed, shared decision making for respiratory tract infections, adult patients or college students, and antibiotic use for respiratory tract infections. Twelve articles were selected for final review. Results: College students and younger, more educated, adults prefer shared decision making. Shared decision making shows promise for decreasing antibiotic use for respiratory tract infections. Education, understanding, and provider-patient communication are important to the shared decision-making process. Conclusions: Shared decision making shows promise to promote the appropriate use of antibiotics for respiratory tract infections in college students and could be considered for future studies. |
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Keywords: | Antibiotic use college students respiratory tract infections shared decision making |
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