Albany College of Pharmacy and Health Sciences, NY, USA.
J Am Pharm Assoc (2003). 2010;50(2):169-73. doi: 10.1331/JAPhA.2010.09208.
To (1) determine the public's current method of medication disposal, (2) identify the public's knowledge of the environmental impact of inappropriate medication disposal, (3) determine whether student-facilitated education improves the public's awareness of safe medication disposal, and (4) determine whether the public recognizes student pharmacists as a public health information resource for issues such as safe disposal of medications.
Cross sectional.
Albany, NY, pharmacies during August and September 2009.
242 patrons at 13 Albany College of Pharmacy and Health Sciences Community Pharmacy Advanced Pharmacy Practice Experience (CPAPPE) sites (2 mass merchandiser, 5 community chain, and 6 grocery store pharmacies).
Nine-question baseline and five-question postintervention anonymous surveys were administered to a convenience sample of store patrons 18 years of age or older.
Medication disposal practices before and after education, beliefs on the environmental importance of inappropriate disposal practices, and perceptions of student pharmacists as sources of information.
Students from CPAPPE sites completed 242 educational interventions. Respondents were primarily women (72%). At baseline, 12.8% of patients disposed of medication appropriately. Respondents frequently flushed medications down the toilet (27.2%) or incorrectly dumped medications in the trash (34.6%). Only 30.9% had received previous advice on safe medication disposal. Posteducation survey results indicated that 80.1% of respondents were willing to change their disposal methods. Increased numbers of respondents viewed inappropriate medication disposal as a moderate to substantial problem (from 57.2% preeducation to 83.9% posteducation). Of participants, 59.7% strongly agreed that student pharmacists were a good resource for information on safe medication disposal.
Additional public education on safe medication disposal is needed. Student pharmacists produced positive outcomes toward reducing this environmental and potential public health risk.
(1)确定公众当前的药物处理方法,(2)了解公众对不当药物处理的环境影响的认知,(3)确定学生主导的教育是否能提高公众对安全药物处理的认识,以及(4)确定公众是否认可学生药剂师是安全处理药物等问题的公共卫生信息资源。
横断面研究。
2009 年 8 月至 9 月,纽约奥尔巴尼的药店。
13 个奥尔巴尼药学院和健康科学社区药房高级实践经验(CPAPPE)点的 242 名顾客(2 家大型零售商、5 家社区连锁店和 6 家杂货店药店)。
对年龄在 18 岁或以上的方便抽样的商店顾客进行了九项基线和五项干预后匿名调查。
教育前后的药物处理做法、对不当处理做法的环境重要性的信念,以及对学生药剂师作为信息来源的看法。
CPAPPE 点的学生完成了 242 次教育干预。受访者主要是女性(72%)。基线时,12.8%的患者正确处理了药物。受访者经常将药物冲下马桶(27.2%)或错误地将药物丢弃在垃圾桶中(34.6%)。只有 30.9%的人以前接受过安全药物处理的建议。干预后调查结果表明,80.1%的受访者愿意改变他们的处理方法。越来越多的受访者认为不当的药物处理是一个中等至严重的问题(从教育前的 57.2%上升到教育后的 83.9%)。在参与者中,59.7%的人强烈认为学生药剂师是安全药物处理信息的良好资源。
需要对安全药物处理进行更多的公众教育。学生药剂师在减少这种环境和潜在公共卫生风险方面产生了积极的结果。