Watson Margaret C, Hart Jo, Johnston Marie, Bond Christine M
Department of General Practice and Primary Care, University of Aberdeen, Westburn Road, Aberdeen, AB25 2AY Scotland, UK.
Pharm World Sci. 2008 Oct;30(5):526-35. doi: 10.1007/s11096-008-9202-y. Epub 2008 Feb 23.
The objectives of this study were to: (1) explore pharmacy support staff (PSS) opinions of and attitudes towards the supply of non-prescription medicines (NPMs); (2) assess whether NPM supply is compliant with professional and good practice guidelines.
This exploratory study was conducted in community pharmacies in Grampian, Scotland, and comprised non-participant observation of NPM consultations, semi-structured interviews with, and a questionnaire of, PSS. Guideline compliance was assessed by a consensus group of practising community pharmacists.
The percentage of consultations which achieved compliance with professional guidelines was calculated. A total score was also calculated for each consultation to assess compliance with good practice guidelines.
Fifty-seven support staff from 21 pharmacies participated in at least one component of the study. In total, 195 observed consultations were evaluable. Fifty-four participants completed a questionnaire and 95 post-consultation interviews were completed. Most consultations involved product requests and were for self-treatment. Overall, interviewees were satisfied or very satisfied with 78 (83.0%) and 14 (14.9%) of all consultations, respectively. Participants' self-reported scores for the quality of consultation were high indicating that they perceived their consultations to be appropriate. Most PSS were aware of good practice guidelines and thought their use was important/very important, yet few consultations were fully guideline compliant. Non-product consultations were more guideline compliant than product consultations. Just over one third (35.6%) of consultations established whether other medication was being used by the intended recipient of the NPM. Few PSS (21.2%) had read the professional guidelines and as such, compliance with these guidelines was extremely low. The percentage of guideline compliant consultations were 6.6% (n = 5) (sufficient information gathered), 13.2% (n = 10) (adequate advice/information provision), 46.1% (n = 35) (personal involvement of pharmacist), 21.1% (n = 16) (particular care of specific patient groups) and 28.9% (n = 22) (pharmacist involvement with specific NPMs).
Few consultations for NPMs in this study were fully guideline compliant. The reasons for non-compliance with good practice and professional guidelines need to be explored. Although failure to comply with professional guidelines could be due to PSS's lack of awareness, this does not explain non-compliance with good practice guidelines.
本研究的目的是:(1)探究药房支持人员(PSS)对非处方药(NPMs)供应的看法和态度;(2)评估NPMs供应是否符合专业和良好实践指南。
这项探索性研究在苏格兰格兰扁地区的社区药房进行,包括对NPMs咨询的非参与观察、与PSS进行的半结构化访谈以及问卷调查。指南合规性由一组执业社区药剂师达成共识进行评估。
计算符合专业指南的咨询百分比。还为每次咨询计算总分以评估符合良好实践指南的情况。
来自21家药房的57名支持人员参与了研究的至少一个部分。总共195次观察到的咨询可进行评估。54名参与者完成了问卷调查,95次咨询后访谈也已完成。大多数咨询涉及产品请求且是用于自我治疗。总体而言,受访者对所有咨询中的78次(83.0%)和14次(14.9%)分别表示满意或非常满意。参与者自我报告的咨询质量得分较高,表明他们认为自己的咨询是合适的。大多数PSS了解良好实践指南,并认为其使用很重要/非常重要,但很少有咨询完全符合指南。非产品咨询比产品咨询更符合指南。略超过三分之一(35.6%)的咨询确定了NPMs的预期接受者是否正在使用其他药物。很少有PSS(21.2%)阅读过专业指南,因此,符合这些指南的情况极低。符合指南的咨询百分比分别为6.6%(n = 5)(收集到足够信息)、13.2%(n = 10)(提供了充分建议/信息)、46.1%(n = 35)(药剂师亲自参与)、21.1%(n = 16)(对特定患者群体特别关注)和28.9%(n = 22)(药剂师参与特定NPMs)。
本研究中很少有NPMs咨询完全符合指南。需要探究不符合良好实践和专业指南的原因。虽然不符合专业指南可能是由于PSS缺乏意识,但这并不能解释不符合良好实践指南的情况。