Mapping evidence of collaboration between traditional health practitioners and biomedically trained healthcare professionals in the reduction of antimicrobial resistance in sub-Saharan Africa: A systematic scoping review protocol
Abstract Background The overuse of prescribed antimicrobials, concurrent use of both traditional medicine and prescribed antimicrobials has been shown to lead to antimicrobial resistance. The absence of collaboration between traditional health practitioners and biomedically trained healthcare professionals can contribute to antimicrobial resistance, treatment failure, overdose, toxicity and misadministration. This scoping review explores evidence on collaboration between traditional health practitioners and biomedically trained healthcare professionals in the reduction of antimicrobial resistance and treatment failure in bacterial and viral diseases. Methods/design We will search electronic databases such as Science Direct, Google scholar, PubMed, MEDLINE via EBSCOhost. We will also search reference lists of included studies. A two-stage mapping procedure will be carried out. Stage one (1) will consist of title, abstracts and full article screening, respectively. A piloted screening form guided by the defined eligibility criteria will be used. Stage two (2), data will be extracted from the included studies. Parallel screening and data extraction will be conducted by two reviewers. Mixed methods appraisal tool (MMAT) will be used to assess the quality of the included studies. NVIVO version 11 will be employed to aid pertinent thematic analysis. The outcomes of interest will be as follows: Primary outcome will be the prevention and the reduction of antimicrobial resistance. Secondary outcomes: Effective collaboration between traditional healthcare practitioners and biomedically healthcare professionals. Discussion This review anticipates uncovering pertinent publications reporting the evidence of collaboration between traditional health practitioners and biomedically trained healthcare professionals in the reduction of antimicrobial resistance in sub-Saharan Africa. The sum up of evidence acquired from the included studies will help guide for future research. The result from the research will be print and electronically exposed.