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Psychometric Validation of the Community Antimicrobial Use Scale (CAMUS) in Primary Healthcare and the Implications for Future Use

Ramdas, N; Schellack, N; Uys, C; Godman, B; Campbell, SM; Meyer, JC (2026) Psychometric Validation of the Community Antimicrobial Use Scale (CAMUS) in Primary Healthcare and the Implications for Future Use. Antibiotics (Basel), 15 (1). p. 107. ISSN 2079-6382 https://doi.org/10.3390/antibiotics15010107
SGUL Authors: Godman, Brian Barr

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Abstract

Background/Objectives: Patient-level factors strongly influence antimicrobial resistance (AMR) through the pressure applied to healthcare professionals to prescribe antibiotics even for self-limiting viral infections, enhanced by knowledge and attitude concerns. This includes Africa, with high levels of AMR. However, validated measurement tools for African primary healthcare (PHC) are scarce. This study evaluated the reliability, structural validity, and interpretability of the Community Antimicrobial Use Scale (CAMUS) in South Africa. Methods: A cross-sectional survey was conducted with 1283 adults across 25 diverse public PHC facilities across two provinces. The 30-item theory-based tool underwent exploratory and confirmatory factor analysis (EFA/CFA), reliability, and validity testing. Results: EFA identified a coherent five-factor structure: (F1) Understanding antibiotics; (F2) Social and behavioural norms; (F3) Non-prescribed use; (F4) Understanding of AMR; and (F5) Attitudes. Internal consistency was strongest for knowledge and misuse domains (alpha approximation 0.80). Test–retest reliability was good-to-excellent (ICC: 0.72–0.89). CFA confirmed acceptable composite reliability (CR ≥ 0.63). Although average variance extracted (AVE) was low for broader behavioural constructs, indicating conceptual breadth, it was high for AMR knowledge (0.737). Construct validity was supported by positive correlations with health literacy (r = 0.48) and appropriate use intentions (r = 0.42). Measurement error metrics (SEM = 1.59; SDC = 4.40) indicated good precision for group-level comparisons. Conclusions: CAMUS demonstrated a theoretically grounded structure with robust performance in knowledge and misuse domains. While social and attitudinal domains require refinement, we believe the tool is psychometrically suitable for group-level antimicrobial use surveillance and programme evaluation in South African PHC settings and wider to help with targeting future educational programmes among patients.

Item Type: Article
Additional Information: Copyright: © 2026 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license.
SGUL Research Institute / Research Centre: Academic Structure > Infection and Immunity Research Institute (INII)
Journal or Publication Title: Antibiotics (Basel)
ISSN: 2079-6382
Publisher License: Creative Commons: Attribution 4.0
Projects:
Project IDFunderFunder ID
129365National Research Foundation of South AfricaUNSPECIFIED
138721National Research Foundation of South AfricaUNSPECIFIED
Dates:
Date Event
2026-01-21 Published
2026-01-08 Accepted
URI: https://openaccess.sgul.ac.uk/id/eprint/118172
Publisher's version: https://doi.org/10.3390/antibiotics15010107

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