Alsairafi Zahra, Mason Julie, Davies Natasha, Dennis Molly, Pilgrim Gabrielle, Goel Neera, Yahyouche Asma, Jalal Zahraa
Department of Pharmacy Practice, Faculty of Pharmacy, Kuwait University. Kuwait (Kuwait).
School of Pharmacy, College of Medical and Dental Sciences, University of Birmingham. Birmingham (United Kingdom).
Pharm Pract (Granada). 2020 Jan-Mar;18(1):1720. doi: 10.18549/PharmPract.2020.1.1720. Epub 2020 Mar 15.
The aim of this study was to investigate the provision of community pharmacy services to children and young people with a focus on advanced services such as medicines use review. Perceptions and experiences of community pharmacists, pharmacy staff, young people and their parents or carers on the provision of such services were also explored.
Four different cross-sectional, self-administered questionnaires were distributed in parallel to pharmacists, pharmacy staff members, children and young people and parents in the United Kingdom.
An outline of pharmacist's current involvement with children and young people was provided by 92 pharmacists. A different group of 38 community pharmacists and 40 non-pharmacist members of pharmacy staff from a total of 46 pharmacies provided information and views on the conduct of Medicines use review with children and young people. Experiences of advanced pharmacy service provision were collected from 51 children and young people and 18 parents. Most pharmacists offered public health advice to children and young people (73/92; 79.3%) and even more (83/92; 90.2%) reported that they often interacted with children and young people with long-term condition. Despite their high levels of interaction, and a majority opinion that medicines use reviews could benefit children (35/38; 92.1%), the number of pharmacies reporting to have conducted medicines use reviews with children was low (5/41). Pharmacists perceived the main barriers to recruitment as consent (17/29; 58.6%), guideline ambiguity (14/29; 48.3%) and training (13/29; 44.8%). A considerable proportion pharmacists (12/29; 41.4%) and other personnel (14/33; 42.4%) working in community pharmacies were unaware that children were potentially eligible for medicines use reviews. Only 29.4% of the 51 children and young people participants had received advice about their long-term condition from a pharmacist and the majority (46/51; 90.2%) had not taken part in an advanced service focused on adherence.
While general engagement with children and young people appears high from the pharmacist's perspective, advice specific to children and young people with long-term conditions and the provision of advanced services in this group remains a challenge.
本研究旨在调查社区药房为儿童和青少年提供的服务,重点关注诸如用药回顾等高级服务。同时还探讨了社区药剂师、药房工作人员、青少年及其父母或照顾者对提供此类服务的看法和经验。
在英国,同时向药剂师、药房工作人员、儿童和青少年以及家长发放了四份不同的横断面自填式问卷。
92名药剂师提供了其目前与儿童和青少年接触情况的概述。来自总共46家药房的38名社区药剂师和40名非药剂师药房工作人员组成的不同群体,提供了关于对儿童和青少年进行用药回顾的信息和观点。从51名儿童和青少年以及18名家长那里收集了提供高级药房服务的经验。大多数药剂师向儿童和青少年提供公共卫生建议(73/92;79.3%),甚至更多(83/92;90.2%)的药剂师报告说他们经常与患有慢性病的儿童和青少年互动。尽管他们的互动程度很高,而且大多数人认为用药回顾对儿童有益(35/38;92.1%),但报告对儿童进行用药回顾的药房数量却很低(5/41)。药剂师认为招募的主要障碍是同意(17/29;58.6%)、指南不明确(14/29;48.3%)和培训(13/29;44.8%)。在社区药房工作的相当一部分药剂师(12/29;41.4%)和其他人员(14/33;42.4%)不知道儿童可能有资格接受用药回顾。在51名儿童和青少年参与者中,只有29.4%的人从药剂师那里得到了关于其慢性病的建议,大多数(46/51;90.2%)没有参加过以依从性为重点的高级服务。
从药剂师的角度来看,虽然与儿童和青少年的总体接触程度似乎很高,但为患有慢性病的儿童和青少年提供特定建议以及在这一群体中提供高级服务仍然是一项挑战。