| Literature DB >> 31498831 |
Hayley C Gorton1,2,3, Donna Littlewood2, Christine Lotfallah1, Matthew Spreadbury1, Kai Ling Wong1, Patricia Gooding4, Darren M Ashcroft1,2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Suicide prevention is a global priority. Despite the focus on primary care in suicide prevention, little is known about the contributory role of community pharmacists and nothing about the role of the wider community pharmacy team in this area. We aimed to explore the current and potential role of community pharmacy teams in self-harm and suicide prevention.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31498831 PMCID: PMC6733435 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0222132
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Summary of demographic characteristics of participants.
| Demographic | Number (n = 25), Percentage (%) |
|---|---|
| Male | 7 (28%) |
| Female | 18 (72%) |
| <25 | 2 (8%) |
| 25–34 | 8 (32%) |
| 35–44 | 2 (8%) |
| 45–54 | 8 (32%) |
| 55+ | 5 (20%) |
| Pharmacist | 8 (32%) |
| Pharmacy Technician | 3 (12%) |
| Dispensing/healthcare assistant | 10 (40%) |
| Pre-registration pharmacist | 2 (8%) |
| Delivery driver | 2 (8%) |
| Independent | 8 (32%) |
| Multiple | 17 (68%) |
| Large town or city | 11 (44%) |
| Small town | 9 (36%) |
| Suburb | 5 (20%) |
| Shopping street | 5 (20%) |
| Shopping centre/mall | 2 (8%) |
| On its own | 12 (48%) |
| Co-located with a doctor’s surgery | 3 (12%) |
| Other | 3 (12%) |
Fig 1Conceptual model to depict the interrelationship between themes.
A conceptul model to represent the role of community pharmacy teams in suicide and self-harm prevention as deduced from the emerging themes from this data. Pharmacy team persons are intergral to, and overarching in, the whole model.
Summary of recommendations for pharmacy practice and research.
| Recommendation | Details |
|---|---|
| Evidence-informed training programe available for all community pharamcy staff. | The whole pharmacy team should be trained in: suicide statistics, dispelling myths, communicating about suicide and navigating effective referral systems. This training programme should be evidence informed and robust measures of intial and continued efficacy should be integrated into systems. |
| Maximise suitablity of pharmacy environment. | The pharmacy environment, including availability of private consulation rooms, already supports conversations about suicide and self-harm. Patients should be made aware that the pharmacy is a place where one can talk about suicide. |
| Design of an effective and accessible referral system. | Referral systems should be co-designed with relevant stakeholders. Ideally, they should enable direct referral by pharmacy teams to an appropriate provider at all times during the pharmacy’s opening hours. |
| Optimise the current pharmacy contract to provide incentivised opportunities for suicide prevention. | Current features of the community pharmacy contract and Quality Payments Scheme could be a vehicle for suicide prevention activities. For example, public health campaigns, mental health champions and formal adaptations to Medicine Use Review (MUR) and New Medicines Service (NMS) schemes. It is essential that the current and potential role of pharmacy teams in suicide prevention is researched from the perspective of the patient. |
| Explore the involvement of medication in suicide and self-harm. | Pharmacy teams seldom mentioned the provision of medication used in poisoning. Further qualitative and epidemiological research could unpack this. |