Rudolph A E, Standish K, Amesty S, Crawford N D, Stern R J, Badillo W E, Boyer A, Brown D, Ranger N, Orduna J M Garcia, Lasenburg L, Lippek Sarah, Fuller Crystal M
Johns Hopkins University Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, USA.
AIDS Educ Prev. 2010 Jun;22(3):238-51. doi: 10.1521/aeap.2010.22.3.238.
Studies suggest that community-based approaches could help pharmacies expand their public health role, particularly pertaining to HIV prevention. Thirteen pharmacies participating in New York's Expanded Syringe Access Program, which permits nonprescription syringe sales to reduce syringe-sharing among injection drug users (IDUs), were enrolled in an intervention to link IDU syringe customers to medical/social services. Sociodemographics, injection practices, beliefs about and experiences with pharmacy use, and medical/social service utilization were compared among 29 IDUs purchasing syringes from intervention pharmacies and 66 IDUs purchasing syringes from control pharmacies using chi-square tests. Intervention IDUs reported more positive experiences in pharmacies than controls; both groups were receptive to a greater public health pharmacist role. These data provide evidence that community-based participatory research aided in the implementation of a pilot structural intervention to promote understanding of drug use and HIV prevention among pharmacy staff, and facilitated expansion of pharmacy services beyond syringe sales in marginalized drug-using communities.
研究表明,基于社区的方法有助于药店扩大其公共卫生作用,特别是在艾滋病毒预防方面。参与纽约扩大注射器获取计划的13家药店被纳入一项干预措施,该计划允许非处方销售注射器以减少注射吸毒者(IDU)之间的注射器共享,该干预措施旨在将购买注射器的IDU客户与医疗/社会服务联系起来。使用卡方检验对从干预药店购买注射器的29名IDU和从对照药店购买注射器的66名IDU的社会人口统计学、注射行为、对药店使用的看法和经历以及医疗/社会服务利用情况进行了比较。与对照组相比,干预组的IDU在药店的体验更积极;两组都接受扩大公共卫生药剂师的作用。这些数据表明,基于社区的参与性研究有助于实施一项试点结构性干预措施,以促进药店工作人员对药物使用和艾滋病毒预防的理解,并促进在边缘化吸毒社区将药店服务从注射器销售扩展到其他方面。