Barriers and Facilitators to Antimicrobial Stewardship in Antibiotic Prescribing and Dispensing by General Practitioners and Pharmacists in Malta: A Systematic Review
Abstract
1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Systematic Review Methodology
2.2. Inclusion and Exclusion Criteria
- i.
- Included GPs and/or pharmacists practicing in Malta.
- ii.
- Examined factors influencing antibiotic prescribing or dispensing, including attitudes, perceptions, knowledge, behaviours, barriers, or facilitators.
- iii.
- Conducted within the Maltese healthcare system (public or private), in primary care and/or hospital settings.
- iv.
- Employed a quantitative, qualitative, or mixed method design based on primary data.
- v.
- Published in a peer-reviewed journal in English or with an English translation available.
- vi.
- Published within the past ten years.
- i.
- Did not include GPs or pharmacists as the primary population of interest (e.g., focused solely on nurses, patients, or specialists).
- ii.
- Were conducted outside of Malta.
- iii.
- Focused exclusively on clinical efficacy, microbiological resistance mechanisms, or intervention outcomes, without exploring behavioural or contextual influences on prescribing.
- iv.
- Addressed topics unrelated to prescribing practices (e.g., antimicrobial manufacturing, veterinary use, or supply chain logistics).
- v.
- Were reviews, editorials, opinion pieces, or commentaries without original empirical data.
- vi.
- Were not published in English and lacked a translated version.
2.3. Search Strategy
- i.
- Antimicrobial stewardship (e.g., “Antimicrobial Stewardship” [MeSH], “antimicrobial stewardship”, “antibiotic stewardship”),
- ii.
- GPs and pharmacists (e.g., “general practitioner*”, “family physician*”, “clinician*”, “pharmacist*”, “community pharmacist”),
- iii.
- Geographic location (e.g., “Malta”).
2.4. Search Results
2.5. Data Extraction
2.6. Quality Assessment of Studies A–G
3. Results
3.1. Demographic Information of Participants in the Included Studies
3.2. Study Designs
3.3. Aims of the Included Studies
3.4. Barriers and Facilitators to Prudent Prescribing and Dispensing
3.4.1. Individual Level
3.4.2. Interpersonal Level
3.4.3. Organisational Level
3.4.4. Community Level
3.4.5. Policy Level
3.5. Bridging to COM-B
4. Discussion
4.1. National Measures for Antibitoic Stewardship in Malta
4.2. Interpretation of Findings
4.3. Practical Implications for Malta
4.4. Limitations and Future Research Directions
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Abbreviations
| AMR | antimicrobial resistance |
| ARTI | acute respiratory tract infection |
| aRTCs | acute respiratory tract complaints |
| CASP | Critical Appraisal Skills Programme |
| COM-B | Capability, Opportunity, Motivation–Behaviour |
| COPE | Committee on Publication Ethics |
| DAP | delayed antibiotic prescribing |
| DOAJ | Directory of Open Access Journals |
| FG | focus group |
| GP | general practitioner |
| IT | information technology |
| JBI | Joanna Briggs Institute |
| N/A | Not applicable |
| OTC | over-the-counter (sales) |
| POCT | point-of-care testing |
| PRISMA | Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses |
| PROSPERO | International Prospective Register of Systematic Reviews |
| TPB | Theory of Planned Behaviour |
| URTI | upper respiratory tract infection |
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| Study | Design | Participants | Demographics | Materials/Measures | Statistical Tests | Qualitative Analysis | Outcome(s) Measured |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| A Tsiantou et al. [21] | Cross-sectional questionnaire design | General practitioners (n = 112) from Malta located in morthern and southern harbour areas, southeastern and western areas) | Females (n = 42, 38%) Mean age, years (46 ± 1.1) Years of experience: <5 (8%), 5–10 (9%), >10 (83%) Practice location: rural (0%), semi-urban (32%), urban (68%) Practice type: public (11%), private (66%), combination (23%) Single/group practice: single (62%), group practice/health centre/hospital (38%) | Demographic Questionnaire Theory of Planned Behaviour Questionnaire (designed by the authors) and translated into Maltese (and available in English) | Pearson’s chi-squared independence test Kruskal–Wallis hypothesis test (parametric/non-parametric) Cronbach’s Alpha Multiple linear regression | N/A | Intention to prescribe Intention to prescribe without well-documented evidence Generalised intention to prescribe GP prescribing behaviour in the recent past (four questions) |
| B Attard Pizzuto et al. [15] | Cross-sectional questionnaire design | Pharmacists practising in Malta (n = 209) | Years of experience: >10 (n = 95) Employed in community pharmacies (n = 87), locum pharmacists (n = 34), own private pharmacy (n = 28) Time spent checking and dispensing antibiotic prescriptions: 21–40 h (38%) Dispensing > 1 antibiotic prescription daily (72%) | Demographic questionnaire Antibiotic Prescribing by Pharmacists Questionnaire (APQPharm) developed by the authors | Friedman Test | N/A | Pharmacists’ antibiotic knowledge and practice Pharmacists’ agreement and competency to prescribe antibiotics |
| C Saliba-Gustafsson et al. [17] | Qualitative Phenomenographic study | Registered general practitioners (n = 20) | Male (n = 14, 70%) Age: 30–49 (n = 2), 40–49 (n = 4), 50–59 (n = 11), 60–69 (n = 2), 70–79 (n = 1) Years of experience in general practice: 0–9 (n = 2), 10–19 (n = 3), 20–29 (n = 10), 30–39 (n = 3), 40–49 (n = 2) Healthcare sector of practice: public (n = 4), private (n = 14), both (n = 2) | Demographic Questionnaire Semi-structured interview guide | N/A | Data were analysed using the phenomenographic approach. Steps taken: (1) familiarisation, (2) compilation and condensation, (3) comparison, grouping and preliminary description, (4) formulation and labelling of different categories of description, (5) final categorisation of descriptions and outcome space | Interview topics included views on antibiotic resistance, antibiotic use for respiratory tract infections, and barriers and facilitators to antibiotic prescriptions |
| D Saliba-Gustafsson et al. [23] | Repeated cross-sectional surveillance design | General practitioners (n = 30) and trainee general practitioners (n = 3) registered data of 4831 patients of all ages suffering from any acute respiratory tract infection | General practitioners Male (n = 24, 73%) Mean age: 49 ± 12 Mean years of GP practice: 23 ± 11 Healthcare sector: public (n = 11, 33%), private (n = 20, 61%), both sectors (n = 2, 6%) Patients Female (n = 2395, 53.1%) Median age 29 (IQR = 12–48) Education: completed up to secondary school (n = 3050, 68%) Smoker (n = 735, 16.5%) | Questionnaire to record demographics, training/experience and service delivery organisation Forms during surveillance weeks for first consultation with patients of all ages suffering from any acute respiratory tract infection including patient and clinical factors, clinical assessment, diagnosis and prescribed medicines | Complete-case analysis Population-averaged models using generalised estimating equations Multivariate Wald-type tests | N/A | Factors associated with antibiotic prescribing |
| E Machowska et al. [12] | Repeated cross-sectional design with intervention elements | General practitioners (n = 51), pre-intervention completers (n = 33), post-intervention (n = 18) | Pre-intervention Age, median (52, IQR = 24–57) Sex: Male (n = 24) Years of GP practice (23, IQR: 16–29) Type of practice: Group (n = 15), Solo (n = 18) Employment sector: public (n = 11), private (n = 20), both (n = 2) Employment type: full-time (n = 22), part-time (n = 11) Post-intervention Age, median (46, IQR = 41–53) Sex: Male (n = 13) Years of GP practice (20, IQR: 15–24) Type of practice: group (n = 10), Solo (n = 8) Employment sector: public (n = 8), private (n = 9), both (n = 1) Employment type: full-time (n = 14), part-time (n = 4) | The intervention had five key elements: Patient booklets (six pages) available in English and Maltese. Patient waiting room posters (n = 4) Soft and hard copies of the updated national antibiotic guidelines Standardised DAP pads including patient information on respiratory tract Infections and appropriate antibiotic use in English and Maltese Educational sessions (n = 4) of a duration of 2 h held online and in-person | Mann–Whitney U Pearson’s chi-quare Fisher’s exact test Population-averaged models using generalised estimating equations Interrupted time series analysis | N/A | Change in antibiotic prescription for acute respiratory tract conditions Change in antibiotic prescription for immediate use, for delayed antibiotic prescription, by diagnosis, and antibiotic class |
| F Saliba-Gustafsson et al. [24] | Qualitative: Latent content analysis | General practitioners (n = 20) | Male (n = 14, 70%) Age: 30–39 (n = 2), 40–49 (n = 4), 50–59 (n = 11), 60–69 (n = 2), 70–79 (n = 1) Experience in general practice (years): 0–9 (n = 2), 10–19 (n = 3), 20–29 (n = 10), 30–39 (n = 3), 40–49 (n = 2) Health sector of practice: public (n = 4), private (n = 14), both (n = 2) | Demographic Questionnaire Semi-structured interview guide | N/A | Manifest and latent content analysis using an inductive approach Transcripts were read independently by two authors; meaning units were identified and condensed into meaning units to identify codes; codes were grouped to develop themes/sub-themes; findings were then visualised in a socio-ecological model | How GPs’ behaviour is influenced by processes and interactions at the individual, interpersonal, organisational, community, and public policy levels |
| G Saleh et al. [16] | Qualitative: Inductive and deductive content analysis | General practitioners (n = 8), pharmacists (n = 24), parents (n = 18) | GPs Male (n = 6, 75%) Age range: FG1: 50–70 (n = 6), FG2: 41–59 (n = 2) Pharmacists Female (n = 19, 79.17%) Age range: FG3: 25–44 (n = 7), FG4: 25–56 (n = 11), FG5: 25–65 (n = 6) Parents Female (n = 13; 72.22%) Age range: FG6: 36–43 (n = 5), FG7: 30–46 (n = 5), FG8: 29–40 (n = 8) | Demographic questionnaire Semi-structured focus group discussion guides | N/A | Data were analysed using deductive and inductive content analysis Data were triangulated to understand stakeholders’ perspectives Transcripts were read several times; meaning units were selected and condensed to generate codes; codes were grouped into sub-categories and coalesced into categories | Antibiotic use and antibiotic resistance in Malta from the perspectives of GPs, pharmacists, and parents Influence of interpersonal relationships among patients, GPs, and pharmacist on antibiotic use Solutions for action—tackling antimicrobial resistance in Malta |
| Study | Checklist | # of Items | Original BF Score | Original DG Score | Number of Discrepancies | Agreed Score | Quality Score (%) | Quality Rating |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| A Tsiantou et al. [21] | JBI Checklist for Analytical Cross-Sectional Studies | 8 | 6 | 6 | 0 | 6 | 75 | High |
| B Attard Pizzuto et al. [15] | JBI Checklist for Analytical Cross-Sectional Studies | 8 | 4 | 5 | 1 | 4 | 50 | Medium |
| C Saliba–Gustafsson et al. [17] | JBI Checklist for Qualitative Research | 10 | 10 | 10 | 0 | 10 | 100 | High |
| D Saliba–Gustafsson et al. [23] | JBI Checklist for Analytical Cross-Sectional Studies | 8 | 7 | 7 | 2 | 8 | 100 | High |
| E Machowska et al. [12] | JBI Checklist for Quasi-Experimental Studies | 9 | 8 | 7 | 1 | 7 | 77.78 | High |
| F Saliba–Gustafsson et al. [24] | JBI Checklist for Qualitative Research | 10 | 9 | 7 | 2 | 8 | 80 | High |
| G Saleh et al. [16] | JBI Checklist for Qualitative Research | 10 | 7 | 7 | 0 | 7 | 70 | Medium |
| Level | Barriers | Facilitators | Supporting Studies |
|---|---|---|---|
| Individual | Prescribing habits and intentions (A) Diagnostic uncertainty (C, F) Belief viral infections progress to bacterial (F) Persistent broad-spectrum use (E) GP demographics: older age, longer experience, female sex (D) Pharmacist decreased confidence in prescribing certain antibiotic classes (metronidazole, quinolones) (B) Patient behaviours: non-compliance, self-medication, unsafe disposal (G) | Endorsement of protocol-based prescribing among the majority of pharmacists (B) Stewardship values (F, G) Recognition that most URTIs are viral (F) Use of delayed prescriptions (E, F) Younger GPs more guideline-compliant (G) Intervention effects: decreased prescriptions for immediate use, increased delayed antibiotic prescribing (E) Availability of antibiotic disposal bins in pharmacies (G) | A, B, C, D, E, F, G |
| Interpersonal | Social pressure/subjective norms (A) Fear of losing patients (“doctor shopping”) (C) Pressure to satisfy regular clients (F) Direct patient requests for antibiotics (F, G) Patient misconceptions (fever requires antibiotics; antibiotics as anti-inflammatories, antibiotics as “holy grail”) (F, G) Resistant parents (G) Quick GP access increasing prescribing (G) Professional isolation (solo GPs) (F) Occasional pharmacist pressure (F) | Trust and continuity in GP–patient relationships (C, G) Positive pharmacist–client interactions with specific advice (G) Clear communication strategies to support delayed prescribing (C, G) GP-led patient education; gradual improvement in awareness (F) Experienced GPs resisting patient pressure (D) Collaborative GP–pharmacist relationships (F, G) | A, C, D, F, G |
| Organisational | Higher prescribing in private pharmacy-based clinics (D) Lack of diagnostics/POCTs; time and cost barriers (F) Weak IT infrastructure; poor communication between sectors; disorganisation of services (F) Limited awareness and use of guidelines (F) Short consultation times restricting patient education (F) | Social marketing intervention: modest but positive prescribing shifts (E) Willingness to adopt POCTs if reliable/efficient (F) Calls for local data and updated guidelines (F, G) Desire for electronic prescribing and health records (G) | D, E, F, G |
| Community | Cultural uncertainty avoidance driving precautionary prescribing (F) Antibiotics perceived as “cure-all” (G) Variability in delayed prescribing practices (G) Pharmaceutical marketing influence (promotion of classes/doses) (F) | Recognition of antibiotic overuse and declining effectiveness (G) Growing public awareness and acceptance of delayed prescriptions, especially with advice (C, G) Younger GPs showing stronger adherence to guidelines (G) | C, D, F, G |
| Policy | Defensive prescribing linked to indemnity insurance (F) Inconsistent enforcement of OTC sales ban (G) | Stricter enforcement of OTC bans (G) Proposed reforms to sick leave policies to reduce parental pressure for antibiotics (G) | F, G |
| Domain | Barriers | Facilitators |
|---|---|---|
| Psychological Capability | Knowledge gaps in antibiotic classes (B); misconceptions such as the belief that viral infections progress to bacterial infections (F); patient misconceptions about antibiotics (F). | Younger GPs’ stronger adherence to guidelines (D, G); recognition that most URTIs are viral (F); stewardship values among clinicians (F); improved public awareness (G). |
| Physical Capability | Diagnostic uncertainty in the absence of POCT (F); lack of training in or use of diagnostics (F); limited consultation time for patient education (F). | Effective communication strategies (F, G); GP-led education initiatives (F); willingness to adopt POCT when available (F). |
| Social Opportunity | Patient pressure and subjective norms (A, F, G); fear of losing patients (C, F); resistant parental attitudes (G); professional isolation (F); pharmacist pressure (F, G); cultural drivers of antibiotic use (F); uncertainty avoidance (F, G). | Trust within GP–patient relationships (F); positive pharmacist–client interactions (G); collaborative relationship between GP–pharmacist (F, G); patient acceptance of delayed prescribing when supported by education (F, G); cultural shift toward guideline adherence among younger GPs (D, G). |
| Physical Opportunity | Commercial pressures in private practice (F); weak enforcement of OTC restrictions (G); limited diagnostics and IT infrastructure (F); poor coordination between healthcare sectors (F, G); influence of pharmaceutical marketing (F); time and cost barriers (F). | Updated prescribing guidelines (D, F); access to reliable POCT (D, E, F); availability of local surveillance data (D); enforcement of OTC bans (G); pharmacy disposal bins for antibiotics (G); multicomponent social marketing interventions (E). |
| Reflective Motivation | Prescribing habits and intentions shaped by prior behaviour (A, D); defensive prescribing linked to indemnity insurance concerns (F); commercial considerations in private practice (D, F). | Willingness to adopt delayed prescribing (C, F, G); professional commitment to patient education (F). |
| Automatic Motivation | Fear of deterioration or complications (F); habitual reliance on broad-spectrum antibiotics (F); automatic concession to patient requests (F, G). | Experienced GPs resisting patient pressure (D); evidence of short-term behaviour change following stewardship interventions (E). |
| Tier | Action | COM-B Domain(s) |
|---|---|---|
| Immediate priorities | Introduce and subsidise rapid point-of-care tests to reduce diagnostic uncertainty and precautionary prescribing. | Psychological Capability; Physical Opportunity |
| Expand GP and pharmacist training in communication skills, delayed antibiotic prescribing, and stewardship principles, with targeted focus on older GPs and pharmacists with knowledge gaps. | Psychological Capability; Reflective Motivation | |
| Promote structured delayed DAP through standardised pads and patient information leaflets to support professional confidence and patient acceptance. | Reflective Motivation; Social Opportunity | |
| Medium-term actions | Implement a national e-prescribing system linked to electronic health records to enable audit/feedback and strengthen GP–pharmacist collaboration. | Physical Opportunity; Social Opportunity |
| Reinforce enforcement of regulations prohibiting over-the-counter antibiotic sales, combined with pharmacy-based disposal bins and education on safe disposal. | Physical Opportunity; Reflective Motivation | |
| Update and disseminate national prescribing guidelines regularly, ensuring inclusion of community-level resistance and prescribing data. | Psychological Capability; Reflective Motivation | |
| System-level reforms | Review professional indemnity and sick-leave policies to reduce defensive prescribing and patient pressure for rapid return to work or school. | Automatic Motivation; Reflective Motivation |
| Sustain public education and social marketing campaigns, integrated with information technology (IT) and diagnostic improvements, and supported by national leadership. | Reflective Motivation; Social Opportunity | |
| Foster GP–pharmacist collaborative models, including protocol-based pharmacist prescribing for minor ailments under clear national frameworks. | Social Opportunity; Psychological Capability |
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Share and Cite
Fenech, B.; Gaffiero, D. Barriers and Facilitators to Antimicrobial Stewardship in Antibiotic Prescribing and Dispensing by General Practitioners and Pharmacists in Malta: A Systematic Review. Antibiotics 2025, 14, 1181. https://doi.org/10.3390/antibiotics14121181
Fenech B, Gaffiero D. Barriers and Facilitators to Antimicrobial Stewardship in Antibiotic Prescribing and Dispensing by General Practitioners and Pharmacists in Malta: A Systematic Review. Antibiotics. 2025; 14(12):1181. https://doi.org/10.3390/antibiotics14121181
Chicago/Turabian StyleFenech, Brian, and Daniel Gaffiero. 2025. "Barriers and Facilitators to Antimicrobial Stewardship in Antibiotic Prescribing and Dispensing by General Practitioners and Pharmacists in Malta: A Systematic Review" Antibiotics 14, no. 12: 1181. https://doi.org/10.3390/antibiotics14121181
APA StyleFenech, B., & Gaffiero, D. (2025). Barriers and Facilitators to Antimicrobial Stewardship in Antibiotic Prescribing and Dispensing by General Practitioners and Pharmacists in Malta: A Systematic Review. Antibiotics, 14(12), 1181. https://doi.org/10.3390/antibiotics14121181

