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The American Journal of Public Health, 2026, Volume 16, Issue 1, Pages: 1-6
The Causes Of Non-Adherence To Antibiotic Treatment
Correspondence to Author: Tueselela Tshimanga dorcas², Yambassa Abanda Ricky Dilane³, Kasamba Ilunga Eric¹.
1. University of Lubumbashi, Faculty of Medicine, Department of Biomedical Sciences.
2. University of Lubumbashi, Faculty of Medicine.
3. University of Kolwezi, Faculty of Medicine
DOI: 10.52338/tajoph.2026.5452
Abstract:
Background: Non-adherence to antibiotic treatment is a major public health concern, particularly in low- and middle-income countries where
self-medication, financial constraints, and limited therapeutic education are common. Poor adherence contributes to therapeutic failure and
accelerates antimicrobial resistance. In the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), local data on the determinants of antibiotic non-adherence
remain scarce.
Objective: To identify socio-economic, educational, behavioral, and healthcare-related factors associated with non-adherence to antibiotic
treatment in two urban settings in southern DRC.
Methods: A descriptive cross-sectional comparative analytical study was conducted between March and May 2025 in Kolwezi and Lubumbashi.
A total of 266 adults who had used at least one antibiotic in the previous six months were interviewed using a structured questionnaire. Nonadherence was defined as failure to comply with at least one element of the prescribed regimen (dose, frequency, or duration). Multivariate
logistic regression was performed to identify independent determinants.
Results: Overall non-adherence was 46.0% in Kolwezi and 58.6% in Lubumbashi (p = 0.04). The main reported causes were premature
discontinuation after symptom improvement (>70%), missed doses, financial constraints, and self-medication. In multivariate analysis, selfmedication (adjusted OR = 2.41; p = 0.001), lack of clear explanations from healthcare personnel (OR = 2.76; p < 0.001), low education level
(OR = 1.89; p = 0.017), financial constraints (OR = 1.68; p = 0.046), and residence in Lubumbashi (OR = 1.52; p = 0.042) were independently
associated with non-adherence. The model showed good calibration (Hosmer–Lemeshow p = 0.64).
Conclusion: Antibiotic non-adherence remains high in southern DRC and is driven by behavioral, educational, and structural factors.
Strengthening patient education, improving therapeutic communication, and regulating antibiotic dispensing are critical strategies to enhance
adherence and combat antimicrobial resistance.
Keywords: Antibiotic adherence; Self-medication; Health literacy; Antimicrobial resistance; Democratic Republic of Congo.
Citation:
Dr. Kasamba Ilunga Eric, The Causes Of Non-Adherence To Antibiotic Treatment. The American Journal of Public Health 2026.
Journal Info
- Journal Name: The American Journal of Public Health
- ISSN: 3064-6677
- DOI: 10.52338/tajoph
- Short Name: TAJOPH
- Acceptance rate: 55%
- Volume: (2025)
- Submission to acceptance: 25 days
- Acceptance to publication: 10 days
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