| Literature DB >> 29587814 |
Tara Carney1,2, John Wells3, Charles D H Parry4,5, Padraig McGuinness6, Richard Harris7, Marie Claire Van Hout8.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The misuse of codeine is of increasing concern in a number of countries, particularly as this relates to over -the-counter pain and cough relief medication, and is also supplied as a prescription medicine. The study aimed to obtain and analyse the opinions and experience of pharmacy staff with regard to codeine misuse.Entities:
Keywords: Codeine; Medications; Opinions; Pharmacy staff
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29587814 PMCID: PMC5870064 DOI: 10.1186/s13011-018-0149-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Subst Abuse Treat Prev Policy ISSN: 1747-597X
Codeine Regulations in Ireland, South Africa and the UK
| Ireland | Irish medicine board. | Over the counter sales permissible in regulated pharmacies under supervision of the pharmacists without prescription Usually in 8 mg/500 and 12.8 mg/500 combination drugs containing analgesics such as paracetamol and aspirin. | Higher strength codeine formulations 15/300, 30/500 of codeine phosphate/paracetamol combinations- are prescription only medicines. Codeine is also available combined with Ibuprofen; a common formulation is 12.8 mg Codeine alongside 200 mg Ibuprofen. |
| South Africa | South African medicines agency. | Over the counter preparations in combination with one or more therapeutically active substances, and containing 20 mg or less of codeine (calculated as base) per dosage unit, . | Prescription Only Medication (POM) medicine in doses up to 20 mg of codeine per dosage unit and are only available on medical prescription. |
| United Kingdom | Medicine and healthcare products regulatory authority Controlled under the Medicine of Drugs Act 1971. | Over the counter sales permissible in regulated pharmacies under supervision of the pharmacists without prescription. Usually in 8/500 and 12.8/500 combination drugs containing analgesics such as paracetamol and aspirin. | Higher strength codeine formulations 15/300, 30/500 of codeine phosphate/paracetamol combinations are prescription only medicines (POM). Codeine is also available combined with Ibuprofen; a common formulation is 12.8 mg Codeine alongside 200 mg Ibuprofen. |
Demographics of pharmacy staff across the three countries and cross-country comparisons
| Demographic Characteristics | Ireland ( | South Africa ( | UK ( | Test statistic χ2( | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Gender | |||||
| Male | 168 (36.2%) | 53 (43.1%) | 44 (34.1%) | 0.28 | |
| Female | 296 (63.8%) | 70 (56.9%) | 85 (65.9%) | 2.54 (2) | |
| Age | |||||
| 20–39 | 278 (59.9%) | 41 (33.3%) | 72 (55.8%) | 41.70 (2) | < 0.001* |
| 40+ | 186 (40.1%) | 82 (66.7%) | 57 (44.2%) | ||
| Number of years in practice: Median (Range) | 12 (1–49) | 25 (0–49) | 15 (1–48) | 42.03 (2) | < 0.001* |
| Type of location | |||||
| Urban | 261 (56.3%) | 84 (68.3%) | 75 (58.6%) | 11.03 (4) | 0.02* |
| Rural | 99 (21.3%) | 17 (13.8%) | 17 (13.3%) | ||
| Both | 102 (22.0%) | 21 (17.1%) | 36 (28.1%) | ||
| Missing | 2 | 1 | 1 | ||
| Type of pharmacy | |||||
| Community/retail | 400 (86.2%) | 98 (83.1%) | 117 (95.1%) | 8.80 (2) | 0.01* |
| Others (Academic, Hospital, More than one type of pharmacy) | 61 (13.1%) | 24 (16.9%) | 10 (4.9) | ||
| Missing | 3 | 1 | 2 | ||
| Position | |||||
| Full-time | 317 (68.3%) | 87 (71.9%) | 91 (70.5%) | 21.65 (6) | < 0.001* |
| Part-time | 57 (12.3%) | 4 (3.3%) | 16 (12.4%) | ||
| Locum | 67 (14.4%) | 14 (11.6%) | 13 (10.1%) | ||
| Pharmacy assistant | 20 (4.3%) | 16 (13.2%) | 9 (7.0%) | ||
| Nearby pharmacies | |||||
| 0 | 49 (10.7%) | 17 (13.8%) | 12 (9.3%) | 53.54 (8) | |
| 1–5 | 175 (38.0%) | 76 (61.8%) | 82 (63.6%) | < 0.001* | |
| 6–10 | 140 (30.4%) | 26 (21.1%) | 19 (14.7%) | ||
| 11–19 | 61 (13.3%) | 3 (2.4%) | 11 (8.5%) | ||
| 20 or more | 35 (7.6%) | 1 (0.8%) | 5 (3.9%) | ||
| 448 (98.0%) | 120 (99.2%) | 125 (98.4%) | 0.76 (2) | 0.68 | |
*p-value is significant
Pharmacy perspectives of codeine as a popular product or problem and cross-country comparisons
| Ireland ( | South Africa ( | UK ( | Test statistic χ2(df) | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Most popular product | |||||
| Cough/cold syrup | 8 (1.8%) | 34 (27.9%) | 1 (0.8%) | 122.7 (2) | < 0.001 |
| Combination medication | 448 (98.2%) | 88 (72.1%) | 128 (99.2%) | ||
| Missing | 10 | 1 | 0 | ||
| Codeine as significant health problem | 302 (65.1%) | 91 (74.0%) | 75 (58.1%) | 7.6 (2) | 0.02* |
| Amount of codeine misused | |||||
| Low | 177 (38.2%) | 40 (32.5%) | 59 (45.7%) | ||
| Medium | 204 (44.9%) | 56 (46.3%) | 59 (45.7%) | ||
| High | 73 (16.1%) | 25 (20.7%) | 10 (7.8%) | ||
| Missing | 12 | 2 | 1 | 2.9 | 0.09 |
*p-value is signficant
Fig. 1Most commonly used codeine-containing products reported by pharmacy staff across three countries
Existing resources for pharmacy staff and cross-country differences
| Ireland ( | South Africa ( | UK ( | Test statistic χ2(df) | p | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Specialist addiction training | 69 (15.0%) | 31 (25.2%) | 32 (24.8%) | 10.9 (2) | 0.004* |
| Need for training and education | 284 (61.5%) | 87 (71.3%) | 81 (62.8%) | 4.1 (2) | 0.13 |
| Need for public education | 393 (85.4%) | 113 (91.1%) | 100 (78.1%) | 8.5 (2) | 0.01* |
| Existing risk management system | 177 (39.0%) | 60 (50.4%) | 66 (51.6%) | 9.5 (2) | 0.009* |
| Willingness to participate in centralized monitoring system | 333 (74.5%) | 96 (80.0%) | 107 (83.6%) | 5.3 (2) | 0.07 |
| Belief that current level of codeine control in jurisdiction is high enough | 192 (42.0%) | 50 (41.0%) | 75 (58.6%) | 12.0 (2) | 0.002* |
*p-value is signficant