Hajjar Rima, Bassatne Aya, Cheaito Mohamad Ali, Naser El Dine Rabie, Traboulsy Sarah, Haddadin Fadi, Honein-AbouHaidar Gladys, Akl Elie A
Faculty of Medicine, American University of Beirut, Beirut, Lebanon.
Hariri School of Medicine, American University of Beirut, Beirut, Lebanon.
PLoS One. 2017 Sep 12;12(9):e0184662. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0184662. eCollection 2017.
Studies around the world have shown that interactions between pharmaceutical companies, pharmacists and physicians have a great influence on prescribing and drug dispensing practices. In middle-income countries, the nature and extent of these interactions have not been well researched. Our objectives were to qualitatively explore the nature of the interactions between pharmaceutical companies, physicians and pharmacists, their impact on drug prescription and dispensing practices in Lebanon.
We used grounded theory approach as well as the known sponsor, purposive, and snowballing sampling strategies to identify interviewees from the three respective groups: physicians, pharmacists, and pharmaceutical representatives. We conducted semi-structured and analyzed transcripts thematically. This study encompassed 6 pharmaceutical representatives, 13 physicians and 13 pharmacists. The following themes emerged: purpose and driver for the interactions, nature of the interactions, incentives, impact on prescription practices, ethical considerations, and suggestions for managing the interactions. The main purposes for the interaction were educational, promotional, and monitoring prescription practices and dispensing, while the main drivers for these interactions were market potential and neighborhood socio-economic status. Physicians, pharmacists and pharmaceutical representatives who engage in these interactions benefit from a variety of incentives, some of which were characterized as unethical. It appears that pharmaceutical companies give prominence to selected physicians within their communities. Although members of the three interviewed groups refer to some of the interactions as being problematic, they described a culture of acceptance of gift giving. We developed a framework that depicts the prevailing politico-cultural environment, the interactions between the three professional groups, and their impact on drug prescription. Underreporting is the main limitation of this study.
Interactions between physicians, pharmacists and pharmaceutical representatives are frequent. Although these interactions can be beneficial, they still have a substantial effect on drug prescription and dispensing practices. Hence, the need for new policies that regulate these interactions and penalize any misconduct.
世界各地的研究表明,制药公司、药剂师和医生之间的互动对处方和配药行为有很大影响。在中等收入国家,这些互动的性质和程度尚未得到充分研究。我们的目标是定性探索制药公司、医生和药剂师之间互动的性质,以及它们对黎巴嫩药物处方和配药行为的影响。
我们采用扎根理论方法以及已知赞助者、目的抽样和滚雪球抽样策略,从医生、药剂师和制药代表这三个相应群体中确定受访者。我们进行了半结构化访谈,并对访谈记录进行了主题分析。本研究涵盖了6名制药代表、13名医生和13名药剂师。出现了以下主题:互动的目的和驱动因素、互动的性质、激励措施、对处方行为的影响、伦理考量以及管理互动的建议。互动的主要目的是教育、促销以及监测处方和配药行为,而这些互动的主要驱动因素是市场潜力和社区社会经济地位。参与这些互动的医生、药剂师和制药代表从各种激励措施中受益,其中一些被认为是不道德的。制药公司似乎在其所在社区中突出某些医生。尽管受访的三个群体的成员提到一些互动存在问题,但他们描述了一种接受送礼的文化。我们构建了一个框架,描绘了当前的政治文化环境、三个专业群体之间的互动及其对药物处方的影响。报告不足是本研究的主要局限性。
医生、药剂师和制药代表之间的互动频繁。虽然这些互动可能有益,但它们对药物处方和配药行为仍有重大影响。因此,需要制定新政策来规范这些互动并惩处任何不当行为。