| Literature DB >> 27672313 |
Ruth M Rodgers1, Shivaun M Gammie1, Ruey Leng Loo1, Sarah A Corlett1, Janet Krska1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Services provided by community pharmacists designed to support people using medicines are increasing. In England, two national services exist: Medicine Use Reviews (MUR) and New Medicines Service (NMS). Very few studies have been conducted seeking views of the public, rather than service users, on willingness to use these services or expectations of these services, or determined whether views align with pharmacist perceptions.Entities:
Keywords: community pharmacy; medicines-related services; pharmacist perceptions; public opinion
Year: 2016 PMID: 27672313 PMCID: PMC5026175 DOI: 10.2147/PPA.S112931
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Patient Prefer Adherence ISSN: 1177-889X Impact factor: 2.711
Demographic details of public respondents
| Characteristic | Number (%) | Kent population (%) |
|---|---|---|
| Sex (n=999) | ||
| Female | 526 (52.7) | 51.6 |
| Male | 473 (47.3) | 48.4 |
| Age group (n=1,000) | ||
| <25 | 140 (14.0) | 26.9 |
| 25–34 | 140 (14.0) | |
| 35–44 | 170 (17.0) | 51.0 |
| 45–54 | 175 (17.5) | |
| 55–64 | 157 (15.7) | |
| 65 and over | 218 (21.8) | 22.1 |
| Ethnicity (n=985) | ||
| White | 712 (72.3) | 93.0 |
| Asian | 112 (11.4) | 3.6 |
| Black | 90 (9.1) | 1.3 |
| Mixed | 62 (6.3) | 1.6 |
| Other | 9 (0.9) | 0.5 |
| Deprivation status (n=920) | ||
| 1 (highest) | 157 (17.1) | 20.5 |
| 2 | 166 (18.0) | 20.2 |
| 3 | 172 (18.7) | 19.9 |
| 4 | 223 (24.2) | 19.8 |
| 5 (lowest) | 202 (22.0) | 19.7 |
| Educational level (n=992) | n/a | |
| None/primary/secondary | 314 (31.7) | |
| Further education | 315 (31.8) | |
| Bachelor/higher degree | 319 (32.2) | |
| Current student | 44 (4.4) | |
| Employment status (n=985) | n/a | |
| Full-time employed | 411 (41.7) | |
| Part-time employed | 196 (19.9) | |
| Retired | 212 (21.5) | |
| Not working | 166 (16.9) | |
| Use of prescribed medicines (n=1,000) | n/a | |
| None | 395 (39.5) | |
| ≤4 | 376 (37.6) | |
| 5–8 | 172 (17.2) | |
| >8 | 57 (5.7) | |
| Use of pharmacies (n=999) | n/a | |
| More than once a month | 136 (13.6) | |
| Once a month | 373 (37.3) | |
| Once every 2–3 months | 258 (25.8) | |
| Less than every 3 months | 91 (9.1) | |
| Never use/do not know | 141 (14.1) | |
Notes:
Derived from Kent and Medway 2011 Census data of population aged ≥18 years.
Derived from Kent and Medway 2011 Census data of all ages.
Abbreviation: n/a, not available.
Demographic details of pharmacist responders and pharmacies
| Characteristic | Number (%) | National data derived from registers (%) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Sex (n=338) | |||
| Female | 179 (53.0) | Female | 40.6 |
| Male | 159 (47.0) | Male | 59.4 |
| Years qualified (n=325) | |||
| ≤3 | 78 (24.0) | Registrants in last 3 years/total register | 18.8 |
| 4–10 | 116 (35.7) | Registrants in last 9 years/total register | 29.3 |
| >10 | 131 (40.3) | Remaining registrants | 51.9 |
| Role in pharmacy (n=340) | |||
| Manager/sole pharmacist | 269 (79.1) | Owner/employee | 76 |
| Second pharmacist | 22 (6.5) | ||
| Superintendent | 13 (3.8) | ||
| Locum | 36 (10.6) | Locum | 24 |
| Type of pharmacy (n=340) | |||
| Large chain (≥31 pharmacies) | 223 (65.6) | National multiple | 55 |
| Medium chain (11–30) | 19 (5.6) | Other multiple | 15 |
| Small chain (2–10) | 33 (9.7) | Chain of ≤4 pharmacies | 29 |
| Single pharmacy | 65 (19.1) | ||
| Location of pharmacy (n =338) | n/a | ||
| High street/suburban | 116 (34.3) | ||
| Shopping precinct/out of town center | 37 (10.9) | ||
| Rural/village | 80 (23.7) | ||
| Supermarket | 31 (9.2) | ||
| Attached to GP surgery | 49 (14.5) | ||
| Other | 25 (7.4) | ||
| Number of MURs in the previous month (n=299) | |||
| 0 | 15 (5.0) | 95% of CPs provide MURs | |
| 1–10 | 36 (12.0) | ||
| 11–20 | 44 (14.7) | ||
| 21–35 | 95 (31.8) | ||
| 36–50 | 75 (25.1) | ||
| ≥51 | 34 (11.4) | ||
| Number of NMS in the previous month (n=303) | |||
| 0 | 39 (12.9) | 80% of CPs provide NMS | |
| 1–10 | 179 (59.1) | ||
| 11–20 | 56 (18.5) | ||
| 21–35 | 24 (7.9) | ||
| ≥36 | 5 (1.7) | ||
Abbreviations: CP, community pharmacy; GP, general practitioner; n/a, not available; NMS, New Medicines Service; MURs, Medicine Use Reviews.
Experiences of and willingness to use medicines-related services among the public
| Service/aspect of service | Had experience of MRS, n (%) | Would be prepared to use MRS in the future, n (%)
| |
|---|---|---|---|
| Yes | Maybe | ||
| Received advice concerning medicines just collected | |||
| In private consultation room | 288 (28.8) | 695 (69.6) | 216 (21.6) |
| In quiet area of pharmacy | 325 (32.5) | 732 (73.3) | 203 (20.3) |
| Across pharmacy counter | 708 (70.9) | 820 (82.1) | 132 (13.2) |
| Received advice concerning new medicine just collected | |||
| In private consultation room | 194 (19.4) | 700 (70.1) | 215 (21.5) |
| In quiet area of pharmacy | 213 (21.3) | 732 (73.3) | 201 (20.1) |
| Across pharmacy counter | 510 (51.0) | 801 (80.2) | 146 (14.6) |
| Had a discussion with a pharmacist: | |||
| Because recently discharged from hospital | 102 (10.2) | 655 (65.6) | 219 (21.9) |
| Because were taking particular medicine | 230 (23.0) | 710 (71.1) | 226 (22.6) |
| A general review in a private consultation room | 248 (24.9) | 685 (68.9) | 233 (23.4) |
| Given pharmacist permission to: | |||
| Telephone you to follow-up about advice already provided | 111 (11.1) | 544 (54.5) | 235 (23.5) |
| Share your information with local NHS | 116 (11.6) | 553 (55.4) | 232 (23.2) |
| Share your information with your doctor | 345 (34.6) | 808 (81.0) | 132 (13.2) |
Abbreviations: MRS, medicines-related service; NHS, National Health Service.
Pharmacist and public perceptions concerning aspects of service provision
| Perceived willingness concerning: | Pharmacists, n (%) | Public, n (%) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Time waiting to talk to the pharmacist | |||
| No more than 5 minutes | 191 (56.7) | 196 (19.6) | <0.001 |
| No more than 10 minutes | 111 (32.9) | 370 (37.1) | |
| No more than 15 minutes | 32 (9.5) | 348 (34.9) | |
| More than 15 minutes | 3 (0.9) | 83 (8.3) | |
| Making an appointment to talk to the pharmacist (% indicating yes) | 161 (48.1) | 717 (71.8) | <0.001 |
| Time waiting for an appointment | |||
| No more than 4 hours | 47 (15.1) | 137 (13.8) | <0.001 |
| No more than 1 day | 86 (27.6) | 379 (37.9) | |
| No more than 4 days | 45 (14.4) | 168 (16.9) | |
| No more than 1 week | 104 (33.3) | 259 (26.0) | |
| More than 1 week | 30 (9.6) | 52 (5.2) | |
| Time spent talking to pharmacist | |||
| No more than 5 minutes | 44 (13.5) | 168 (16.7) | 0.01 |
| No more than 15 minutes | 193 (59.0) | 477 (47.8) | |
| No more than 30 minutes | 64 (19.6) | 216 (21.6) | |
| More than 30 minutes | 26 (8.0) | 137 (13.7) | |
Figure 1Potential reasons for using medicines-related service identified by pharmacist and the public.
Notes: *Difference between pharmacist and public views; P<0.001 χ2 test.
Examples of views expressed by pharmacist and public respondents on medicine advisory services
| Respondent | Comment | Characteristics |
|---|---|---|
| Pharmacist views | There is little connection between prescriber/pharmacist with both MUR and NMS. It would be better with MURs if patients were required to have them prior to a clinical review by GP and then prescriber could undertake their review with feedback information to hand. With the NMS a formal direction to enter the service should be made by prescribers and pharmacists should feed back to the prescribers postintervention | Male manager/sole pharmacist in large multiple pharmacy |
| MURs and NMS are now a means for increasing pharmacy revenue, we are hounded daily to do MURs and NMS by head office, we are told to do easy ones that don’t take long, they are no longer about patient’s needs but how much we get for them! | Female locum in small chain pharmacy | |
| At the moment MUR and NMS very rarely lead to optimization of medicine management and patients often question what was the point of it | Female manager/sole pharmacist in medium chain pharmacy | |
| Public views | Can trust pharmacists more after these experiences. More knowledge – easier access for help than GP | Male, 34 or younger, on no regular medicines |
| A pharmacist has more knowledge than I thought and seems more willing to help and is not as patronizing as some GPs | Male, 65 or over, using more than eight medicines | |
| Pharmacists do a lot more than before, they do not just dispense but they also make sure that I take my medication correctly and ask how I feel. The pharmacist also makes sure that I visit the doctor when I need to | Female, 65 or over, using up to four medicines |
Abbreviations: GP, general practitioner; MUR, Medicine Use Review; NMS, New Medicines Service.
Public and pharmacist expectations and experiences of medicines-related services
| Medicines reviews with a pharmacist help people to: | Expectations | Experiences | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Public (%) | Pharmacists (%) | All public (%) | Regular medicine users (%) | Pharmacists (%) | |
| Benefit in general | 781 (78.2) | 293 (89.3) | 550 (55.3) | 428 (71.2) | 265 (83.9) |
| Know more about medicines | 729 (72.9) | 275 (83.1) | 441 (44.2) | 343 (56.8) | 236 (73.8) |
| Understand better how to use medicines | 757 (75.7) | 282 (86.0) | 480 (48.2) | 369 (61.3) | 270 (84.1) |
| Encourage medicines use as doctor expects | 774 (77.5) | 230 (70.1) | 515 (51.7) | 396 (65.8) | 185 (57.5) |
| Sort out problems | 612 (61.2) | 261 (79.3) | 298 (29.9) | 243 (40.4) | 223 (70.1) |
| Order fewer medicines/reduce waste | 441 (44.1) | 175 (53.2) | 158 (15.8) | 138 (22.9) | 135 (42.2) |
Notes:
Differences between pharmacist and public expectations were all significant (P<0.001).
Differences between pharmacist and public experiences were significant (P<0.001) with the exception of encouraging medicine use as per doctor expectations.