| Literature DB >> 25608555 |
Cecilia Brata1,2, Brahmaputra Marjadi3, Carl R Schneider4, Kevin Murray5, Rhonda M Clifford6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Gathering sufficient information when handling self-medication requests in community pharmacies is an important factor in assisting patients to obtain appropriate health outcomes. Common types of information usually gathered include patient identity, signs and symptoms, action taken, medical history, and current medications being used. The aims of the study were (1) to describe the types and amount of information gathered by Eastern Indonesian community pharmacy staff when handling self-medication requests, and (2) to identify factors associated with the reported amount of information gathered.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 25608555 PMCID: PMC4312435 DOI: 10.1186/s12913-014-0670-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Health Serv Res ISSN: 1472-6963 Impact factor: 2.655
Description of the simulated patient and the scenarios
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| Group 1: A lay person, female, age 60 and a pharmacist, female, age 31 | Group 1: A lay person, female, age 60 and a pharmacist, female, age 31 | Group 3: A pharmacist, male, age 35 and a pharmacist, female, age 30 |
| Group 2: A lay person, male, age 55 and a pharmacist, male, age 25 | Group 2 : A lay person, male, age 55 and a pharmacist, male, age 25 | |
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| On entering the pharmacy, one of the simulated patients said: “What is a good cough medicine that you recommend?” | On entering the pharmacy, one of the simulated patients said: “I want to buy Woods merah | On entering the pharmacy, one of the simulated patients said: “My child has diarrhoea, what do you recommend?” |
| Information provided (only upon questioning): | Information provided (only upon questioning): | |
| • The patient is the one who has cough. He/she has been coughing for 4 weeks. The cough is dry, irritating and constant. There are no accompanying symptoms. | • The patient is 4 years old, weight ±20 kg, and height: ±1 m. | |
| • The patient tried Bisolvon syrup two weeks ago, but it did not work. | • The patient has acute onset of simple diarrhoea. The diarrhoea started about 6 hours ago. The patient has gone to the toilet three times. The consistency of the stool was mushy, softer than usual. | |
| • The patient was diagnosed with hypertension 2 months ago and routinely consumes captopril 25 mg three times a day. | ||
| • The patient does not have any medical condition other than hypertension and does not routinely consume any medicines, supplements, or herbal medicines other than captopril. | • The patient is generally well, still can play around. Patient is not restless, not irritable, not lethargic, and still has normal drinking habit. The patient has no accompanying symptoms and has not taken any medicines for diarrhoea. The patient has no other medical conditions and does not routinely take any other medications, supplements or herbal medicines. The patient does not have any allergies. | |
| • The patient does not smoke and is not a passive smoker. The patient exercises regularly and follows a healthy diet. | • The patient does not eat anything unusual and no other family members have diarrhoea. | |
| • The blood pressure is controlled (~130/80) and the patient does not have any allergies. | ||
Woods merah is one of the Indonesian brand names of cough medicines that contains Dextromethorphan HBr and Doxylamine.
The types of information gathered (obtained from pharmacy staff interview)
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| Patient identity | 159 (92%) | 41 (98%) | 26 (81%) | 92 (93%) | |
| Signs and symptoms | |||||
| • Nature of symptoms | 164 (95%) | 42 (100%) | 30 (94%) | 92 (93%) | |
| • Duration of symptoms | 101 (58%) | 31 (74%) | 15(47%) | 55(56%) | |
| • Precipitating factors | 38 (22%) | 15 (36%) | 11(33%) | 12 (12%) | |
| • History of the symptoms | 30 (17%) | 15 (36%) | 4 (13%) | 11 (11%) | |
| • Accompanying symptoms | 162 (94%) | 39 (93%) | 30 (94%) | 93 (94%) | |
| • Danger symptoms* | 44 (25%) | 16 (28%) | 12 (38%) | 16 (16%) | |
| Action taken | 120 (69%) | 37 (88%) | 23 (72%) | 60 (61%) | |
| Medical history | 34 (20%) | 11 (26%) | 8 (25%) | 15 (15%) | |
| Current medications being used | 45 (26%) | 15 (36%) | 7 (22%) | 23 (23%) | |
| Allergies | 53 (31%) | 13 (31%) | 12 (38%) | 28 (28%) | |
*Danger symptoms referred to symptoms that warrant medical referral.
Figure 1Study participants for pharmacy manager and pharmacy staff interviews.
Pharmacy characteristics
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| Pharmacy type | |
| • Attached to doctor’s clinic | 50 (72%) |
| • Not attached to doctor’s clinic | 19 (28%) |
| Pharmacy location | |
| • Street | 62 (90%) |
| • Residential areas | 3 (4%) |
| • Traditional market | 3 (4%) |
| • Shopping mall | 1 (1%) |
| Pharmacy ownership | |
| • Pharmacist | 7 (10%) |
| • Non-pharmacist | 60 (87%) |
| • Other (i.e., joint business of pharmacist and non-pharmacist) | 2 (3%) |
| Pharmacy services | |
| • Self-medication services | 69 (100%) |
| • Compounding prescription medication services | 65 (94%) |
| • Non-compounding prescription medication services | 68 (99%) |
| • Other (e.g., health promotion, etc.) | 2 (3%) |
| Estimated total patients served per day (from 67 pharmacies)* | 4595 |
| Estimated total patients served for self-medication per day (from 67 pharmacies)* | 2975 |
| Total staff employed in the 69 pharmacies surveyed | 352 |
| • Total number of pharmacists | 75 |
| • Total number of pharmacy technicians | 86 |
| • Total number of staff who do not have formal education in pharmacy | 191 |
| Total staff working hours per week in the 69 pharmacies surveyed | |
| • Pharmacists | 1270 |
| • Pharmacy technicians | 3542 |
| • Other staff who do not have formal education in pharmacy | 8973 |
| Total pharmacy opening hours per week in the 69 pharmacies surveyed | 6198 |
| Number of pharmacies which had a ratio of pharmacists’ working hours per week to total pharmacy opening hours as <1** | 68 (99%) |
| Number of pharmacies which had a ratio of pharmacy technicians’ working hours per week to total pharmacy opening hours as <1** | 52 (75%) |
| Number of pharmacies in which the pharmacist manager had a primary job other than being a pharmacy manager (i.e., as a government employee) | 55 (80%) |
*Calculated from 67 pharmacies. There were 2 missing data for these questions.
**Ratio <1 implied that pharmacists or pharmacy technicians were not always available during pharmacy opening hours.
Pharmacy staff characteristics
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| Professional background | |
| • Pharmacists$ | 42 (24%) |
| • Pharmacy technician* | 32 (19%) |
| • Staff without formal educational background in pharmacy | 99 (57%) |
| Age (years; mean ± SD) | 30 ± 7.8 |
| Gender : female | 140 (81%) |
| Highest education qualification | |
| • Pharmacist registration training program | 42 (24%) |
| • Bachelor degree in pharmacy | 2 (1%) |
| • Three year diploma in pharmacy | 21 (12%) |
| • Pharmacy assistant school equivalent to senior high school | 9 (5%) |
| • Senior high school | 79 (46%) |
| • Others (i.e., bachelor degree or diploma in subjects other than pharmacy) | 20 (12%) |
| Working experience (years; median, IQR#) | 3, IQR = 1.5 – 7 |
| Ever attended training on self-medication after graduation from the highest education qualification | |
| • Yes | 19 (11%) |
| • No | 154 (89%) |
$A pharmacist in Indonesia is a person who has a bachelor degree in pharmacy and holds a pharmacist registration training certificate.
*A pharmacy technician in Indonesia is a person who has graduated from pharmacy assistant school or has three year diploma in pharmacy or a person who has a bachelor degree in pharmacy without holding a pharmacist registration training certificate.
#IQR = Interquartile range.
The types of information gathered (obtained from patient simulation)
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| • Patient identity | 23 (30%) | 2 (3%) | 77 (96%) |
| • Signs and symptoms, This included: | |||
| o Nature of symptoms (i.e., whether the cough productive or non productive in the 2 cough scenarios; and stool consistency and frequency of diarrhoea in the childhood diarrhoea scenario). | 67 (88%) | 4 (6%) | 22 (28%) |
| o Duration of symptoms | 16 (21%) | 0 (0%) | 27 (34%) |
| o History of symptoms | 3 (4%) | 0 (0%) | 0 (0%) |
| o Precipitating factors | 0 (0%) | 0 (0%) | 4 (5%) |
| o Accompanying symptoms | 28 (37%) | 0 (0%) | 12 (15%) |
| o Danger symptoms* | 0 (0%) | 0 (0%) | 0 (0%) |
| • Action taken | 12 (16%) | 0 (0%) | 5 (6%) |
| • Medical history | 3 (4%) | 0 (0%) | 0 (0%) |
| • Current medications being used | 0 (0%) | 0 (0%) | 0 (0%) |
| • Allergies | 0 (0%) | 0 (0%) | 0 (0%) |
*Danger symptoms are defined as symptoms that warrant medical referral. For the cough scenarios, danger symptoms constituted symptoms such as chest pain, shortness of breath, wheezing, green/rusty/blood in sputum. For the diarrhoea scenarios, danger symptoms constituted symptoms such as blood/mucus in the stool and severe dehydration signs.
Figure 2The amount of information gathered. PS-Int: Pharmacy staff interview results (n = 173); PS-SBR for cough: Patient simulation results of symptom-based self-medication requests for cough (n = 76); PS-PBR for cough: Patient simulation results of product-based self-medication requests for cough (n = 69); PS-SBR for diarrhoea: Patient simulation results of symptom-based self-medication requests for childhood diarrhoea (n = 80).
Factors associated with the reported amount of information gathered
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| Professional background | ||||
| • Pharmacist |
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| • Pharmacy technician |
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| • Staff without formal education in pharmacy | Reference | Reference | ||
| Age | ||||
| • <30 years old | 1.3 (0.74-2.26) | 0.370 |
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| • ≥30 years old | Reference | Reference | ||
| Gender | ||||
| • Male | 0.99 (0.50 – 1.98) | 0.984 | ||
| • Female | Reference | |||
| Working experience | ||||
| • ≤3 years |
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| • >3 years | Reference | Reference | ||
| Post-graduation training in self-medication | ||||
| • Yes | 2.2 (0.84 – 5.75) | 0.109 | ||
| • No | Reference | |||
| Type of pharmacy | ||||
| • Attached to doctors’ clinic | 2.0 (0.99 – 4.03) | 0.055 | ||
| • Not attached to doctors’ clinic | Reference | |||
| Total number of patients served per day. | 1.0 (0.99, 1.01) | 0.867 | ||
| Total number of patients requesting self-medication served per day. | 1.0 (0.99, 1.01) | 0.893 | ||
| Total pharmacists’ working hours per week. |
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| Total pharmacy technicians’ working hours per week. | 1.0 (0.99 – 1.01) | 0.999 | ||
Bold value indicated variables that were significantly associated with an increase in the amount of information gathered based on p < 0.05.
*Only significant variables were presented.