Sinopoulou Vassiliki, Summerfield Paul, Rutter Paul
School of Pharmacy and Biomedical Sciences, University of Central Lancashire, Preston, Lancashire, UK.
School of Pharmacy, Wolverhampton University, Wolverhampton, UK.
J Eval Clin Pract. 2017 Dec;23(6):1482-1488. doi: 10.1111/jep.12837. Epub 2017 Oct 8.
RATIONALE, AIMS, AND OBJECTIVES: Self-care policies are increasingly directing patients to seek advice from community pharmacists. This means pharmacists need to have sound diagnostic decision-making skills to enable them to recognise a variety of conditions. The aim of this study was to investigate the process by which pharmacists manage patient signs and symptoms and to explore their use of decision-making for diagnostic purposes.
Data were collected through semi-structured, face-to-face interviews with community pharmacists working in England, between August 2013 and November 2014. Pharmacists were asked to share their experiences on how they performed patient consultations, and more specifically how they would approach a hypothetical headache scenario. As part of the interview, their sources of knowledge and experience were also explored. Framework analysis was used to identify themes and subthemes.
Eight interviews were conducted with pharmacists who had a wide range of working practice, from 1 year through to 40 years of experience. The pharmacists' main motivations during consultations were product selection and risk minimisation. Their questioning approach and decision-making relied heavily on mnemonic methods. This led to poor quality information gathering-although pharmacists acknowledged they needed to "delve deeper" but were often unable to articulate how or why. Some pharmacists exhibited elements of clinical reasoning in their consultations, but this seemed, mostly, to be unconscious and subsequently applied inappropriately. Overall, pharmacists exhibited poor decision-making ability, and often decisions were based on personal belief and experiences rather than evidence.
Community pharmacists relied heavily on mnemonic methods to manage patients' signs and symptoms with diagnosis-based decision-making being seldom employed. These findings suggest practicing pharmacists should receive more diagnostic training.
原理、目的和目标:自我护理政策越来越多地引导患者向社区药剂师寻求建议。这意味着药剂师需要具备良好的诊断决策技能,以便能够识别各种病症。本研究的目的是调查药剂师处理患者体征和症状的过程,并探讨他们在诊断目的中决策的运用。
2013年8月至2014年11月期间,通过与在英格兰工作的社区药剂师进行半结构化面对面访谈收集数据。要求药剂师分享他们在进行患者咨询方面的经验,更具体地说,是他们如何处理假设的头痛情况。作为访谈的一部分,还探讨了他们的知识和经验来源。采用框架分析法来识别主题和子主题。
对8名药剂师进行了访谈,他们的工作经验范围广泛,从1年到40年不等。药剂师在咨询过程中的主要动机是产品选择和风险最小化。他们的提问方式和决策严重依赖记忆方法。这导致信息收集质量不佳——尽管药剂师承认他们需要“深入探究”,但往往无法阐明如何或为何这样做。一些药剂师在咨询中表现出临床推理的要素,但这似乎大多是无意识的,随后应用不当。总体而言,药剂师的决策能力较差,决策往往基于个人信念和经验而非证据。
社区药剂师严重依赖记忆方法来处理患者的体征和症状,很少采用基于诊断的决策。这些发现表明,执业药剂师应接受更多的诊断培训。