| Literature DB >> 28970435 |
Anna Bryndis Blondal1, Sofia Kälvemark Sporrong2, Anna Birna Almarsdottir3.
Abstract
Even though pharmaceutical care is not a new concept in pharmacy, its introduction and development has proved to be challenging. In Iceland, general practitioners are not familiar with pharmaceutical care and additionally no such service is offered in pharmacies or primary care settings. Introducing pharmaceutical care in primary care in Iceland is making great efforts to follow other countries, which are bringing the pharmacist more into patient care. General practitioners are key stakeholders in this endeavor. The aim of this study was to introduce pharmacist-led pharmaceutical care into primary care clinics in Iceland in collaboration with general practitioners by presenting different setting structures. Action research provided the framework for this research. Data was collected from pharmaceutical care interventions, whereby the pharmaceutical care practitioner ensures that each of a patient's medications is assessed to determine if it is appropriate, effective, safe, and that the patient can take medicine as expected. Sources of data included pharmaceutical care notes on patients, researcher's notes, meetings, and interviews with general practitioners over the period of the study. The study ran from September 2013 to October 2015. Three separate semi-structured in-depth interviews were conducted with five general practitioners from one primary health care clinic in Iceland at different time points throughout the study. Pharmaceutical care was provided to elderly patients (n = 125) before and between general practitioners' interviews. The study setting was a primary care clinic in the Reykjavik area and the patients' homes. Results showed that the GPs' knowledge about pharmacist competencies as healthcare providers and their potential in patient care increased. GPs would now like to have access to a pharmacist on a daily basis. Direct contact between the pharmacist and GPs is better when working in the same physical space. Pharmacist's access to medical records is necessary for optimal service. Pharmacist-led clinical service was deemed most needed in dose dispensing polypharmacy patients. This research indicated that it was essential to introduce Icelandic GPs to the potential contribution of pharmacists in patient care and that action research was a useful methodology to promote and develop a relationship between those two health care providers in primary care in Iceland.Entities:
Keywords: action research; general practitioners; pharmaceutical care; pharmacists; primary care
Year: 2017 PMID: 28970435 PMCID: PMC5597148 DOI: 10.3390/pharmacy5020023
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pharmacy (Basel) ISSN: 2226-4787
Figure 1Overview of the two action research cycles in the study.
Overview of the two action research cycles. The time period and stage within each cycle are shown, and for each stage, the specific objectives, process, and output leading to the subsequent stage.
| Time Period/Cycle Stage | Objective | Process | Output |
|---|---|---|---|
| September to December 2013 | Understand GPs’ perspective on various issues | Conduct and analysis of the first round of in-depth interview with participant GPs | There are several unmet needs regarding medicines and patient monitoring, and GPs are not familiar with pharmacist clinical service. |
| January 2014 | Find common ground to move forward with the program from the results | Meeting with participating GPs | GPs are unfamiliar with pharmacist services. It was decided to provide pharmaceutical care to 50 patients and focus on elderly home dwelling polypharmacy patients and then interview GPs immediately after. |
| February to October 2014 | Provide pharmaceutical care and focus on polypharmacy patients | Pharmaceutical care process as defined by Cipolle et al. [ | The participating researcher provided pharmaceutical care to 50 elderly home-dwelling patients with no access to medical records. |
| November and December 2014 | Get GPs views on the pharmacist service provided | Conduct of the second round of in-depth interviews with GPs | The second round of in-depth interviews with participating GPs. |
| December 2014 and January 2015 | Describe the results from the pharmaceutical care intervention and in-depth interviews | Analysis of the second round of interviews with GPs and research notes | GPs found the pharmaceutical care service useful but that it needed more structure. |
| January 2015 | Find common ground to move forward with the program | Meeting with participating GPs | It was decided to provide pharmaceutical care to 50 dose dispensing patients at the primary care clinic with access to medical records and then interview GPs immediately after. |
| February to June 2015 | Provide pharmaceutical care and focus on polypharmacy dose dispensing patients | Pharmaceutical care process as defined by Cipolle et al. [ | The participating researcher provided pharmaceutical care to 50 patients. The service was provided at the primary care clinic with access to medical records. |
| June 2015 | Get GPs’ views on the pharmacist service provided | Conduct of the third round of in-depth interviews with GPs | The third round of in-depth interviews with participating GPs. |
| August to October 2015 | Describe the result from the pharmaceutical care intervention and in-depth interviews | Analysis of the third round of interviews and research notes | GPs found this second type of intervention to be an improvement and that it gave useful input into clinical decision-making. |