Al-Arifi Mohammed N
Drug and Poison Information Center, College of Pharmacy, King Saud University, Riyadh, Kingdom of Saudi Arabia. Tel. +966 (1) 4677352. Fax. +966 (1) 4674229. E-mail:
Neurosciences (Riyadh). 2008 Oct;13(4):412-20.
To examine the attitudes of community pharmacist to both mental illness and provision of pharmaceutical care.
The study was conducted from May 2006 to September 2006 in College of Pharmacy, King Saud University, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. The survey composed of the demographic characteristics of the respondents, who were asked 6 Likert type questions on the attitudes of the pharmacists toward mental illness, providing pharmaceutical care to mentally ill patients, the barriers of the provision of the service and differentiation between different types of mental illness.
Forty-three pharmacists participated in the study. Eighty-eight percent of the pharmacists felt that mental illness was the same as other illnesses. Sixty-six percent of the respondents "strongly agree," or "agree" that mentally ill patients were easily recognizable. Thirty-three percent of the respondents "disagree," or "strongly disagree" that mentally ill patients have no ability to tell right from wrong. In general, 43.3-87.7% of respondents are being "much more" or "more" interested, comfortable, and confident to perform pharmaceutical care to mentally ill patients. An average range of 30-67% of respondents felt neutral, or "much more" or "more" comfortable, confident for screening and solving drug-related problems, and compliance with drug therapy. Barriers that limit the provision of pharmaceutical care to the mentally ill patients include the lack of training in pharmaceutical care practice (88.4%), lack of therapeutic knowledge (83.7%), lack of documentation skill (79%), lack of communication (76.8%), lack of space for counseling (76.7%), insufficient time (74.5%) and lack of staff (72.1%).
Although pharmacists have positive attitudes to both mental illness and providing pharmaceutical care to mentally ill patients, they felt uncomfortable counseling or carrying out follow-up monitoring of patients for adverse drug-related problems.
考察社区药剂师对精神疾病以及提供药学服务的态度。
该研究于2006年5月至2006年9月在沙特阿拉伯利雅得国王沙特大学药学院进行。调查内容包括受访者的人口统计学特征,向他们询问了6个李克特量表式问题,涉及药剂师对精神疾病的态度、为精神病患者提供药学服务、提供服务的障碍以及不同类型精神疾病之间的差异。
43名药剂师参与了该研究。88%的药剂师认为精神疾病与其他疾病相同。66%的受访者“强烈同意”或“同意”精神病患者很容易辨认。33%的受访者“不同意”或“强烈不同意”精神病患者没有辨别是非的能力。总体而言,43.3%至87.7%的受访者“更加”或“更”有兴趣、更自在且更有信心为精神病患者提供药学服务。平均30%至67%的受访者对于筛查和解决药物相关问题以及药物治疗依从性感到中立、“更加”或“更”自在、更有信心。限制为精神病患者提供药学服务的障碍包括缺乏药学服务实践培训(88.4%)、缺乏治疗知识(83.7%)、缺乏记录技能(79%)、缺乏沟通(76.8%)、缺乏咨询空间(76.7%)、时间不足(74.5%)和人员短缺(72.1%)。
尽管药剂师对精神疾病以及为精神病患者提供药学服务持积极态度,但他们在为患者提供咨询或对药物相关不良反应进行随访监测时感到不自在。