University of New Mexico College of Pharmacy, Department of Pharmacy Practice & Administrative Sciences, Albuquerque, NM, USA.
University of New Mexico College of Pharmacy, Department of Pharmacy Practice & Administrative Sciences, Albuquerque, NM, USA.
Public Health. 2020 Apr;181:135-140. doi: 10.1016/j.puhe.2019.12.010. Epub 2020 Feb 28.
This study sought to describe patient experiences and perceptions of a public health initiative designed to improve tuberculosis (TB) testing access using the tuberculin skin test (TST) in a community pharmacy setting.
This was a cross-sectional study.
A telephonic survey of patients who had received a TST at one of twelve participating community pharmacies between August 2014 and July 2016 was conducted. The 26-question survey was developed by two pharmacists with expertise in TB management and one pharmacy student. Before administration the survey was peer-reviewed for clarity. Potential study patients were identified through TST records at the study pharmacies. English-speaking patients older than 18 years were eligible for study inclusion. Statistical differences in responses based on location were identified using chi-squared test for frequency comparisons with a P-value of <0.05 to determine statistical significance.
A total of 1709 patients received a TST during the study period, of whom 431 were contacted and 325 participated, meeting the predetermined representative sample needed of 314 patients. The majority of study patients were female (67.1%) and white (81%). The mean age was 36 years (standard deviation = 14.1). A majority (68.3%) lived <5 miles from the TST pharmacy, while 45.2% of those with a primary care provider (PCP) (61.6% of respondents) lived within 5 miles of the PCP's office. Care was accessible and met patients' testing needs. For most patients (84.6%), the initial and follow-up appointments took < 20 min. Follow-up TST reading rate was 98.5%; 4.3% of tests were positive. Positive TST results were associated with use of a small city pharmacy (P = 0.003). Perception differences based on location were identified.
Uptake of the TST service in the community pharmacy setting was high and patients reported positive experiences.
本研究旨在描述一项旨在改善社区药房中结核菌素皮肤试验(TST)检测途径的公共卫生计划,描述患者的体验和看法。
这是一项横断面研究。
对 2014 年 8 月至 2016 年 7 月间在 12 家参与社区药房中接受 TST 的患者进行了电话调查。该 26 个问题的调查由两名在结核病管理方面有专业知识的药剂师和一名药剂学生开发。在管理调查之前,对其进行了同行评审以确保其清晰性。通过研究药房的 TST 记录来识别潜在的研究患者。符合条件的研究患者为年龄大于 18 岁的讲英语患者。使用卡方检验识别基于位置的应答差异,比较频率,P 值<0.05 以确定统计学意义。
在研究期间,共有 1709 名患者接受了 TST,其中 431 人被联系,325 人参与,符合 314 名患者的预定代表性样本需求。大多数研究患者为女性(67.1%)和白人(81%)。平均年龄为 36 岁(标准差=14.1)。大多数患者(68.3%)距离 TST 药房<5 英里,而 45.2%有初级保健提供者(PCP)的患者(61.6%的应答者)距离 PCP 办公室<5 英里。患者获得了可及且满足其检测需求的护理。对于大多数患者(84.6%),初始和随访预约时间少于 20 分钟。TST 随访阅读率为 98.5%;4.3%的测试呈阳性。阳性 TST 结果与使用小城市药房有关(P=0.003)。根据位置识别出感知差异。
在社区药房环境中 TST 服务的利用率较高,患者报告的体验为正面。