| Literature DB >> 29844718 |
Jacinthe Lemay1, Mohammad Waheedi2, Dalal Al-Taweel2, Tania Bayoud2, Pierre Moreau3.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Pharmacy practice has considerably evolved from a dispensing role to a patient-centered profession. Kuwait has minimal clinical pharmacy services established in its healthcare settings.Entities:
Keywords: Barriers; Clinical pharmacy; Implementation; Kuwait; Perceptions; Services
Year: 2018 PMID: 29844718 PMCID: PMC5961747 DOI: 10.1016/j.jsps.2018.02.011
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Saudi Pharm J ISSN: 1319-0164 Impact factor: 4.330
Demographics and job background characteristics of the pharmacists’ sample (N = 166) and a comparison between those reporting providing one or more clinical services (n = 77) with those reporting not providing any clinical service (n = 89).
| Variables | Total (n = 166) | Provided clinical service (n = 77; 46%) | Did not provide clinical Service (n = 89; 54%) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Age n (%) | |||
| 21–29 | 64 | 30 (47%) | 34 (53%) |
| 30–39 | 55 | 26 (47%) | 29 (53%) |
| 40–49 | 25 | 11 (44%) | 14 (56%) |
| 50+ | 22 | 10 (45%) | 12 (55%) |
| Gender, n (%) | |||
| Male | 71 | 25 (35%) | 46 (65%) |
| Female | 95 | 52 (55%) | 43 (45%) |
| Nationality, n (%) | |||
| Kuwaiti | 92 | 43 (47%) | 49 (53%) |
| Non-Kuwaiti | 74 | 34 (46%) | 40 (54%) |
| Pharmacy education, n (%) | |||
| Bachelor’s degree | 147 | 64 (44%) | 83 (56%) |
| Oher degrees (MPharm, MSc, PharmD) | 19 | 13 (68%) | 6 (32%) |
| Country of first pharmacy degree, n (%) | |||
| Kuwait | 58 | 34 (59%) | 24 (41%) |
| Other countries | 108 | 43 (40%) | 65 (60%) |
| Years of practicing pharmacy, mean ± SD | 11.1 ± 9.8 | 11.3 ± 9.9 | 10.9 ± 9.9 |
| Hospital, n (%) | |||
| Al-Amiri | 23 | 8 (35%) | 15 (65%) |
| Mubarak Al-Kabeer | 39 | 19 (49%) | 20 (51%) |
| Al-Farwanniya | 22 | 9 (41%) | 13 (59%) |
| Al-Adan | 25 | 13 (52%) | 12 (48%) |
| Al-Jahra | 25 | 15 (60%) | 10 (40%) |
| Al-Sabah | 32 | 13 (41%) | 19 (59%) |
Groups are statistically different by Chi square test.
A comparison between those reporting providing one or more clinical services with those reporting not providing any clinical service (n = 77).
| Type of service | Provided in the past | % | Currently providing | % | Either past or present | % |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Provide healthcare education and drug information | 26 | 34% | 40 | 52% | 66 | 86% |
| Active member in hospital committees (e.g., Pharmacy and Therapeutics, antimicrobial stewardship, etc.) | 14 | 18% | 26 | 34% | 40 | 52% |
| Participate in guidelines or protocols development | 16 | 21% | 24 | 31% | 40 | 52% |
| Involved in medication safety projects | 14 | 18% | 25 | 32% | 39 | 51% |
| Actively participate in multidisciplinary patient care rounds | 21 | 27% | 17 | 22% | 38 | 49% |
| Develop and initiate a pharmaceutical care plan | 18 | 23% | 20 | 26% | 38 | 49% |
| Conduct interview to collect and document a complete medication history | 19 | 25% | 10 | 13% | 29 | 38% |
Variables characterizing clinical services and reactions to those services, as perceived by the respondents (n = 77).
| Variable | Statistics |
|---|---|
| Year of initiating clinical service(s) | |
| Range | 1989–2017 |
| Median | 2015 |
| Mode | 2016 |
| Was the clinical service your initiative or requested by your superior? n (%) | |
| Respondent pharmacist’s decision | 31 (40%) |
| Superior’s decision | 30 (39%) |
| Decision from both | 11 (14%) |
| Other | 3 (4%) |
| Time dedicated to clinical pharmacy service(s), n (%) | |
| 75–100% | 8 (10%) |
| 50–75% | 9 (12%) |
| 25–50% | 12 (16%) |
| 5–25% | 27 (35%) |
| less than 5% | 20 (26%) |
| Do you expect current clinical services to expand over the next 12 months? n (%) | |
| Yes | 16 (21%) |
| No | 6 (8%) |
| Not sure | 55 (71%) |
| Do you expect offering additional clinical services over the next 12 months? n (%) | |
| Yes | 23 (30%) |
| No | 7 (9%) |
| Not sure | 47 (61%) |
| Perceived physician reactions | |
| Clinical services well perceived by physician, n (%) | |
| Never or rarely | 2 (3%) |
| Sometimes | 39 (51%) |
| Often or always | 34 (44%) |
| Clinical services specifically requested by physicians, n (%) | |
| Never or rarely | 21 (27%) |
| Sometimes | 33 (43%) |
| Often or always | 22 (29%) |
| Pharmacist’s recommendations accepted by prescriber, n (%) | |
| Never or rarely | 1 (1%) |
| Sometimes | 45 (58%) |
| Often or always | 30 (39%) |
| Perceived nurse reactions | |
| Clinical services well perceived by nurses, n (%) | |
| Never or rarely | 5 (6%) |
| Sometimes | 17 (22%) |
| Often or always | 46 (60%) |
| Not applicable | 8 (10%) |
| Clinical services specifically requested by nurse, n (%) | |
| Never or rarely | 17 (22%) |
| Sometimes | 24 (31%) |
| Often or always | 26 (34%) |
| Not applicable | 8 (10%) |
Sum of counts < 77 are due to missing values.
Other: Hospital accreditation requirement and request came from medical doctors.
Time spent by physicians managing patient’s medications (n = 284).
| How many days per week do you contact a pharmacist regarding patient’s medication, n (%) | Every day | 4–6 days/week | 1–3 days/week | <once a week |
| 31 (11%) | 17 (6%) | 55 (19%) | 181 (64%) | |
| How many days per week do you ask (or are you asked) to intervene on patient’s medication | Every day | 4–6 days/week | 1–3 days/week | <once a week |
| 120 (43%) | 46 (16%) | 41 (15%) | 73 (26%) | |
| How much time per day do you spend on patient counselling in relation to their medications | < 30 min | 1–2 h | 2–3 h | > 3 h |
| 185 (66%) | 77 (27%) | 13 (5%) | 7 (2%) | |
Sum of counts < 284 are due to missing values.
Fig. 1Physicians perceptions of pharmacists (n = 284); data presented as percentages.