| Literature DB >> 31013879 |
Sherilyn K D Houle1, Kristina Kozlovsky2, Heidi V J Fernandes3, Zahava Rosenberg-Yunger4.
Abstract
In December 2016, pharmacists in Ontario, Canada with authorization to administer injections saw an expansion in their scope from a restriction to the influenza vaccination only to now including an additional 13 vaccine-preventable diseases, largely those related to travel. It was uncertain whether this change in scope would see sufficient uptake, or translate to a corresponding expansion in other travel health service offerings from community pharmacies. In October/November 2017 a survey was conducted of all licensed community pharmacists in Ontario, followed by semi-structured interviews with 6 survey respondents in June 2018. A web-based survey of members of the public from a single region of the province was also conducted in September 2018 to assess uptake of expanded vaccination services. Broad variability in uptake of these services was noted, ranging from the dispensing of travel-related medications and vaccinations only through to vaccine administration and prescribing under medical directive; however, uptake was generally at the lower end of this spectrum. This was evidenced by 94% of pharmacists reporting administering fewer than 10 travel vaccinations per month, fewer than 10% of patients reporting receiving a travel vaccine administered by a pharmacist, and a maximum of 30 pharmacies (of nearly 6000 in the province) designated to provide yellow fever vaccinations. Fewer than 1 in 3 pharmacists reported performing some form of pre-travel consultation in their practice, often limited to low-risk cases only. Barriers and facilitators reported were similar for these services as they were for other non-dispensing services, including insufficient time to integrate the service into their workload, perceived lack of knowledge and confidence in travel health, and low patient awareness of these new services available to them through community pharmacies.Entities:
Keywords: community pharmacy; immunization; pharmacist; travel; vaccination
Year: 2019 PMID: 31013879 PMCID: PMC6630201 DOI: 10.3390/pharmacy7020035
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pharmacy (Basel) ISSN: 2226-4787
Vaccines that can currently be administered by authorized pharmacists in Ontario.
| Vaccine | Prescription Required |
|---|---|
| Bacillus Calmette-Guérin | Yes |
| No | |
| Meningococcal | No |
| Pneumococcal | No |
| Typhoid | Yes |
| Typhoid / Hepatitis A Combination | Yes |
| Hepatitis A | Yes |
| Hepatitis B | Yes |
| Hepatitis A&B Combination | Yes |
| Herpes zoster | Yes |
| Human papillomavirus | No |
| Japanese encephalitis | Yes |
| Rabies | Yes |
| Varicella | Yes |
| Yellow Fever | Yes |
Pharmacist survey respondent characteristics.
| Characteristic | Frequency (%) |
|---|---|
|
| |
| Chain | 78 (38.0%) |
| Independent | 51 (24.9%) |
| Banner | 50 (24.4%) |
| Mass merchandiser | 15 (7.3%) |
| Grocery store | 10 (4.9%) |
| Not specified | 1 (0.5%) |
|
| |
| Staff pharmacist | 93 (45.4%) |
| Owner | 47 (22.9%) |
| Manager | 46 (22.6%) |
| Relief pharmacist | 18 (8.8%) |
| Not specified | 1 (0.5%) |
|
| |
| Less than 1 | 3 (1.5%) |
| 1–5 | 41 (20.0%) |
| 6–10 | 46 (22.4%) |
| 11–20 | 46 (22.4%) |
| 21–30 | 35 (17.1%) |
| More than 30 | 32 (15.6%) |
| Not specified | 2 (1.0%) |
|
| |
| Less than 8 | 11 (5.4%) |
| 8–16 | 12 (5.9%) |
| 17–24 | 16 (7.8%) |
| 25–32 | 25 (12.2%) |
| 33–40 | 86 (42.0%) |
| More than 40 | 51 (24.9%) |
| Not specified | 4 (2.0%) |
|
| |
| Male | 97 (47.3%) |
| Female | 102 (49.8%) |
| Gender variant / non-conforming | 1 (0.5%) |
| Not specified | 5 (2.4%) |
|
| |
| Yes | 178 (86.8%) |
| No | 21 (10.2%) |
| Not specified | 6 (2.9%) |
Figure 1Pharmacist respondents’ self-report of vaccinations they have personally administered to patients since December 2016.
Figure 2Travel-related services offered by respondents’ practice site before and after scope expansion. Asterisk indicates activities requiring delegation or medical directive from a physician or other healthcare professional. Note: * indicates activities requiring a medical directive.
Figure 3Barriers impacting ability to offer travel-related services.
Figure 4Facilitators (actual or potential) impacting ability to offer travel-related services.
Vaccines reported by survey respondents as being received by injection from a pharmacist.
| Vaccine | Frequency (%) |
|---|---|
| Influenza | 117 (47.2%) |
| Herpes zoster | 16 (6.5%) |
| Pneumococcal | 15 (6.0%) |
| Hepatitis A&B combination | 14 (5.6%) |
| Bacillus Calmette-Guérin | 8 (3.2%) |
| Meningococcal | 8 (3.2%) |
| Varicella | 7 (2.8%) |
| Typhoid | 6 (2.4%) |
| Hepatitis B (monovalent) | 6 (2.4%) |
| Hepatitis A (monovalent) | 5 (2.0%) |
| Rabies | 3 (1.2%) |
| Yellow fever | 3 (1.2%) |
| 2 (0.8%) | |
| Human papillomavirus | 1 (0.4%) |
| Japanese encephalitis | 1 (0.4%) |
Figure 5Designated Yellow Fever Vaccination Centres in Ontario, by category and date.
Pharmacist survey questions.
| Question | Answer Options |
|---|---|
|
| |
| Do you currently work in a community pharmacy practice setting? | • Yes |
| • No | |
| Do you currently have an Ontario Part A license to practice pharmacy in the province? | • Yes |
| • No | |
|
| |
| Which type of community pharmacy practice setting do you primarily work in? | • Independent community pharmacy |
| • Community pharmacy associated with a chain | |
| • Community pharmacy associated with a banner | |
| • Community pharmacy associated with a grocery store | |
| • Community pharmacy associated with a mass merchandiser | |
| • Other (please specify) | |
| What is your role in the community pharmacy practice setting you work in? | • Community pharmacy owner |
| • Community pharmacy manager | |
| • Community pharmacy staff pharmacist | |
| • Community pharmacy relief pharmacist | |
| Where is your community pharmacy practice setting located? | • Central East |
| • Central South | |
| • Central West | |
| • East | |
| • North | |
| • South West | |
| • Toronto | |
| How many years have you worked in a community pharmacy practice setting? | • Less than 1 |
| • 1 to 5 | |
| • 6 to 10 | |
| • 11 to 20 | |
| • 21 to 30 | |
| • More than 30 | |
| On average, how many hours per week do you work in a community pharmacy practice setting? | • Less than 8 |
| • 8 to 16 | |
| • 17 to 24 | |
| • 25 to 32 | |
| • 33 to 40 | |
| • More than 40 | |
| Which gender do you most identify with? | • Male |
| • Female | |
| • Gender Variant/Non-conforming | |
| Are you authorized to administer injections in Ontario? | • Yes |
| • No | |
|
| |
| Do you currently administer travel or travel-related vaccinations at your pharmacy? | • Yes |
| • No | |
| When and how do you currently offer travel or travel-related vaccinations at your pharmacy? Select all that apply. | • Anytime by walk-in |
| • During set days/hours by walk-in (e.g., clinic days) | |
| • By appointment | |
| What would be your preferred method for offering travel or travel-related vaccinations at your pharmacy? | • Anytime by walk-in |
| • During set days/hours by walk-in (e.g., clinic days) | |
| • By appointment | |
| • No preference | |
| Does your pharmacy charge a fee to patients to administer travel or travel-related vaccinations? | • Yes (please specify the fee amount) |
| • No | |
| Which of the following travel or travel-related vaccines have you personally administered since the expansion of Ontario pharmacists’ scope in December 2016? Select all that apply. | • Bacille Calmette-Guérin (BCG) (for tuberculosis) |
| • Haemophilus influenza type b (Hib) | |
| • Hepatitis A | |
| • Hepatitis B | |
| • Combined hepatitis a and b | |
| • Herpes zoster (shingles) | |
| • Human papillomavirus (HPV) | |
| • Japanese encephalitis | |
| • Meningitis | |
| • Pneumococcus | |
| • Rabies | |
| • Typhoid | |
| • Combined typhoid and hepatitis A | |
| • Varicella zoster (chickenpox) | |
| • Yellow Fever | |
| • None of the above | |
| Which other vaccines have you personally administered under delegation or a medical directive? Select all that apply. | • Diphtheria |
| • IPV (poliomyelitis) | |
| • Measles, mumps, rubella (MMR) | |
| • Pertussis | |
| • Tetanus | |
| • Other (please specify) | |
| • None of the above | |
| On average, how many travel or travel-related vaccinations do you administer in a month? | • Less than 5 |
| • 5 to 10 | |
| • 11 to 15 | |
| • 16 to 20 | |
| • More than 20 | |
|
| |
| Do you currently perform travel consultations at your pharmacy? | • Yes |
| • No | |
| When and how do you currently offer travel consultations at your pharmacy? Select all that apply. | • Anytime by walk-in |
| • During set days/hours by walk-in | |
| • By appointment | |
| What would be your preferred method for offering travel consultations at your pharmacy? | • Anytime by walk-in |
| • During set days/hours by walk-in | |
| • By appointment | |
| • No preference | |
| Does your pharmacy charge a fee to patients to receive a travel consultation? | • Yes (please specify the fee amount) |
| • No | |
| On average, how many travel consultations do you complete in a month? | • Less than 5 |
| • 5 to 10 | |
| • 11 to 15 | |
| • 16 to 20 | |
| • More than 20 | |
|
| |
| Which travel medicine services did you offer prior to the regulatory change? Select all that apply. | • Individual travel consultations |
| • Prescribing of travel or travel-related vaccines under delegation | |
| • Prescribing of other drugs for travel purposes (e.g., travellers’ diarrhea, altitude sickness, malaria) under delegation | |
| • Travel or travel-related vaccine administration under delegation | |
| • MedsCheck prior to travel | |
| • Travel medicine clinic days/events | |
| • Other (please specify) | |
| • Not applicable—I was not offering travel medicine services prior to the regulatory change | |
| Which travel medicine services do you currently offer? Select all that apply. | • Individual travel consultations |
| • Prescribing of travel or travel-related vaccines under delegation | |
| • Prescribing of other drugs for travel purposes (e.g., travellers’ diarrhea, altitude sickness, malaria) under delegation | |
| • Travel or travel-related vaccine administration under expanded scope | |
| • Travel or travel-related vaccine administration under delegation | |
| • MedsCheck prior to travel | |
| • Travel medicine clinic days/events | |
| • Other (please specify) | |
| • Not applicable – I am not currently offering travel medicine services | |
| Please choose one of the following statements that best describes how your pharmacy practice has changed since the regulatory expansion with respect to the number of travel medicine services you complete on a monthly basis. (Consider all travel medicine services you offer.) | • I am completing a higher number of services |
| • I am completing a lower number of services | |
| • I am completing about the same number of services | |
| How does your pharmacy promote your travel-related services (vaccinations, consultations, and other related services) to patients? Select all that apply. | • In-store posters |
| • Signs outside of the pharmacy | |
| • Newspaper/radio ads | |
| • Bag stuffers | |
| • Website | |
| • Social media (e.g., Facebook, Twitter) | |
| • Word of mouth | |
| • Audio ads over pharmacy's intercom system | |
| • Audio ads while patients are on hold on the phone with the pharmacy | |
| • Other (please specify) | |
|
| |
| What have been, or would you consider to be, the primary barrier(s) to implementing travel medicine services in your community pharmacy practice? Select all that apply. | • Lack of injection training |
| • Lack of travel medicine training | |
| • Lack of knowledge of/access to resources/materials | |
| • Lack of time to dedicate to travel medicine services | |
| • Insufficient availability of support staff (e.g., pharmacy technicians, assistants) | |
| • Lack of demand from patients | |
| • Lack of patient awareness of pharmacists’ expanded scope | |
| • Patients unwilling to have pharmacist vaccinate | |
| • Lack of remuneration | |
| • Unsure how to incorporate processes into daily work flow | |
| • Travel medicine services are already available near my place of practice | |
| • I am uncomfortable with administering injections | |
| • Religious beliefs | |
| • I want to avoid conflict with other professionals who can vaccinate | |
| • I do not want to be professionally responsible for the act of vaccination | |
| • I do not feel prepared to handle allergic or adverse reactions in my pharmacy | |
| • Lack of private space | |
| • Other (please specify) | |
| Of the options you selected in the previous question, please select the ONE that you consider to be the PRIMARY barrier to implementing travel medicine services in your community pharmacy practice. | • Lack of injection training |
| • Lack of travel medicine training | |
| • Lack of knowledge of/access to resources/materials | |
| • Lack of time to dedicate to travel medicine services | |
| • Insufficient availability of support staff (e.g., pharmacy technicians, assistants) | |
| • Lack of demand from patients | |
| • Lack of patient awareness of pharmacists’ expanded scope | |
| • Patients unwilling to have pharmacist vaccinate | |
| • Lack of remuneration | |
| • Unsure how to incorporate processes into daily work flow | |
| • Travel medicine services are already available near my place of practice | |
| • I am uncomfortable with administering injections | |
| • Religious beliefs | |
| • I want to avoid conflict with other professionals who can vaccinate | |
| • I do not want to be professionally responsible for the act of vaccination | |
| • I do not feel prepared to handle allergic or adverse reactions in my pharmacy | |
| • Lack of private space | |
| • Other (please specify) | |
| What have been, or would you consider to be, the primary facilitator(s) for the implementation of travel medicine services in your community pharmacy practice? Select all that apply. | • Completion of additional training in immunization or travel medicine |
| • Collaboration with other healthcare professionals or health clinics | |
| • Increased patient demand | |
| • Increased awareness of pharmacists’ expanded scope | |
| • Increased support staff hours | |
| • Increased use of pharmacy technicians’ scope of practice | |
| • Designated travel medicine services pharmacist | |
| • Pharmacists’ ability to prescribe travel vaccines or travel-related medicine | |
| • Revenue generation | |
| • Other (please specify) | |
| Of the options you selected in the previous question, please select the ONE that you consider to be the PRIMARY facilitator to implementing travel medicine services in your community pharmacy practice. | • Completion of additional training in immunization or travel medicine |
| • Collaboration with other healthcare professionals or health clinics | |
| • Increased patient demand | |
| • Increased awareness of pharmacists’ expanded scope | |
| • Increased support staff hours | |
| • Increased use of pharmacy technicians’ scope of practice | |
| • Designated travel medicine services pharmacist | |
| • Pharmacists’ ability to prescribe travel vaccines or travel-related medicine | |
| • Revenue generation | |
| • Other (please specify) | |
| Do you find your pharmacy’s travel medicine service(s) to be revenue generating? | • Yes |
| • No | |
| What do you feel primarily contributes to the profitability of your service(s). Select all that apply. | • A fee-for-service is charged to patients |
| • More people are becoming patients at my pharmacy because of the travel medicine services I/we offer | |
| • More travel-related OTC sales after counselling are occurring | |
| • More patients are bringing in their travel-related prescriptions because of the travel medicine service I/we offer | |
| • Efficiencies (through optimal use of staff, materials/resources used, implementation of processes, etc.) have been created as a result of implementing travel medicine services | |
| • Not applicable – a business evaluation of this service has not yet been conducted by our pharmacy | |
| • Other (please specify) | |
|
| |
| Which areas of additional travel medicine-related education would facilitate the implementation or improve the quality of pharmacist-led travel medicine services in your community pharmacy? Select all that apply. | • Processes for completing a pre-travel assessment |
| • Pre-travel assessment knowledge based on geographical location(s) during travel | |
| • Pre-travel assessment knowledge based on activity/activities during travel | |
| • Pre-travel assessment knowledge based on patients’ health status, comorbidities, and special patient populations | |
| • Travel-related diseases | |
| • Travel-related vaccines | |
| • Travel-related prescription medication use | |
| • Travel-related self-care and non-prescription drug measures | |
| • Other travel health risks | |
| • Other (please specify) | |
| • Not applicable – I feel confident in my travel medicine-related knowledge and training background | |
| With respect to acquiring further travel medicine-related education, which forms of education would be most appealing to you? Select up to 5 options. | • Self-directed online continuing education course of <2 h duration |
| • Self-directed online continuing education course of 2+ h duration | |
| • Webinar | |
| • In-person or live continuing education course (half day) | |
| • In-person or live continuing education course (full day) | |
| • Downloadable clinical practice guidelines on travel medicine topics | |
| • Downloadable or printable educational materials (e.g., booklets) | |
| • Mobile app or online resources | |
| • Self-assessment tools | |
| • Diploma/certificate level training in travel medicine | |
| • Other (please specify) | |
| Would you be interested in pursuing a Certificate in Travel Health designation from the International Society of Travel Medicine in the next 5 years? | • Yes |
|
| |
| Which of the following statements best describes your future plans with respect to offering travel medicine services in your pharmacy? | • Already implementing, and not currently working on a plan to further expand |
| • Already implementing, and wanting/working on a plan to further expand | |
| • Intend to implement, and currently working on a plan | |
| • Interested in implementing, but not currently working on a plan | |
| • No intention to implement in the near future | |
| In addition to allowing additional vaccines to be administered, the regulatory changes under the | • My pharmacy now has pharmacy students and/or interns administering vaccines |
| • My pharmacy does not have pharmacy students or interns administering vaccines and does not intend to have them administering vaccines | |
| • My pharmacy does not have pharmacy students or interns administering vaccines but is considering having them administer vaccines in the future | |
| • Unsure | |
| • Not applicable – vaccines are not administered at my pharmacy | |
| Would you want OPA to advocate for pharmacists’ ability to prescribe travel and travel-related vaccines? | • Yes |
| • No | |
| • Unsure | |
| Would you want OPA to advocate for pharmacists’ ability to prescribe travel-related drugs (e.g., travellers’ diarrhea, malaria, altitude sickness, etc.)? | • Yes |
| • No | |
| • Unsure | |
OPA, Ontario Pharmacists Association; OTC, over-the-counter.