| Literature DB >> 31694852 |
Lobna Abdullah Al Juffali1, Peter Knapp2, Sinaa Al-Aqeel3, Margaret C Watson4.
Abstract
AIM: To achieve multi-stakeholder consensus and prioritisation of medication safety problems in community pharmacies in Saudi Arabia. DESIGN AND INTERVENTION: A theoretically-underpinned, three-round Delphi study.Entities:
Keywords: Delphi Technique; community pharmacy services; drug related side effects and adverse reactions; ergonomics; medication errors; patient safety
Year: 2019 PMID: 31694852 PMCID: PMC6858180 DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2019-032419
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Open ISSN: 2044-6055 Impact factor: 2.692
Participants' responses by group across all rounds
| Questionnaires | Round 1 | Round 2 | Round 3 | |||
| No. sent | Participants | No. sent | Participants | No. sent | Participants | |
| Pharmacy users | 284 | 43.6 (124) | 119 | 74.7 (89) | 119 | 68.0 (81) |
| Professionals | 37 | 32.4 (12) | 12 | 91.6 (11) | 12 | 83.3 (10) |
| Community pharmacists | 38 | 65.7 (25) | 23 | 86 (20) | 23 | 91.3 (21) |
| Total | 359 | 44.8 (161) | 154 | 79.2 (120) | 154 | 72.7 (112) |
Figure 1The Delphi process.
Demographics of participants in Round 1
| Characteristic | Pharmacy users | Professionals | Community pharmacists | Total |
| % (n) | % (n) | % (n) | % (n) | |
| Number of participants R1 | 124 | 12 | 25 | 161 |
| Gender – female | 64 (79) | 41.6 (5) | 0 | 52 (84) |
| Age (years.) mean (SD) | 35.8 (12) | 37.8 (13.6) | 32.4 (7.1) | 35.4 (11.5) |
| Nationality | ||||
| Saudi | 100 (124) | 100 (12) | 0 | 84.4 (136) |
| Non-Saudi | 0 | 0 | 100 (25) | 15.5 (25) |
| Highest educational qualification | ||||
| High school | 13 (16) | 0 | 0 | 10 (16) |
| Bachelor’s | 59 (73) | 33 (4) | 92 (23) | 62 (100) |
| Master’s | 19 (24) | 42 (5) | 8 (2) | 19 (31) |
| PhD | 7 (9) | 25(3) | 0 | 7 (12) |
| Geographical distribution | ||||
| Central region | ||||
| Riyadh | 76.7 (95) | 83 (10) | 100 (25) | 80.7 (130) |
| Al Qassim | 10.5 (13) | – | – | 8.1 (13) |
| Hail | 1.6 (2) | – | – | 1.2 (2) |
| Eastern region | 4.8 (6) | 8 (1) | – | 4.3 (7) |
| Western region | 2.4 (3) | – | – | 1.9 (3) |
| Northern region | 0.8 (1) | – | – | 0.6 (1) |
| Outside Saudi Arabia | 2.4 (1) | 8 (1) | – | 1.2 (2) |
Medication safety problems which consensus was achieved across stakeholder groups after completing round 1 and 2
| Human factors | Statement |
| External factors | The lack of training programmes, for example, residency programmes, in the undergraduate curriculum for pharmacists. |
| Organisational and management factors | The lack of a patient database in community pharmacies in Saudi Arabia. |
| Work factors | Pharmacist long working hours |
| Physician factors | Illegible physicians’ handwriting. |
| Pharmacist factors | The lack of post-registration education for pharmacists. |
| Communication and information exchange | Patients not requesting information about medication. |
| Patient behaviour | Patients diagnosing and treating themselves independently of any healthcare professional. |
| Patient factors | Patients with long-term conditions. |
Figure 2Top ranked medication safety problems across all stakeholder group. POM, prescription only medication.
Top five ranked medication safety problems by stakeholder group
| Rank | Pharmacy users | Professionals | Community pharmacists |
| 1 | Pharmacies lacking facilities to provide different services such as counselling and compounding medication. | Pharmacies lacking facilities to provide different services such as counselling and compounding medication. | The lack of drug information software resources that help pharmacists retrieve information quickly. |
| 2 | Lack of community pharmacists adhering to regulations. | Look-alike medication or sound-alike medication, which are medicine brand names that look or sound the same as other medicine brand names when written or spoken. | Pharmacists’ long working hours. |
| 3 | The lack of communication between the pharmacist and the prescribing physician. | Patients using multiple medications. | Patients not providing full information about their health condition. |
| 4 | The lack of a patient database in community pharmacies in Saudi Arabia. | The lack of a patient database in community pharmacies in Saudi Arabia. | The lack of a patient database in community pharmacies in Saudi Arabia. |
| 5 | The lack of post-registration education for pharmacists. | The lack of knowledge of community pharmacists. | Commercial pressure from pharmaceutical companies on prescribing physicians. |
Prioritisation of medication safety problems according to the human factors framework across stakeholder groups
| Human factors | Pharmacy users | Professional | Community pharmacists |
| External factors | Having more than one regulatory body to regulate community pharmacy in Saudi Arabia, for example, Ministry of Health and Saudi Food and Drug Authority. | The lack of enforcement of regulations by the Ministry of Health. | Commercial pressure from pharmaceutical companies on prescribing physicians. |
| Organisational and management factors | The lack of a patient database in community pharmacies in Saudi Arabia. | The lack of a patient database in community pharmacies in Saudi Arabia. | The lack of drug information software resources that help pharmacists retrieve information quickly. |
| Work factors | Pharmacies lacking facilities to provide different services such as counselling and compounding medication. | Pharmacies lacking facilities to provide different services such as counselling and compounding medication. | Pharmacists’ long working hours. |
| Physician factors | The lack of communication between the pharmacist and the prescribing physician to check prescriptions. | Physicians prescribing unnecessary medication. | Illegible physicians’ handwriting. |
| Pharmacist factors | The lack of community pharmacists adhering to regulations. | The lack of knowledge of community pharmacists. | The lack of post-registration education for pharmacists. |
| Task factors | Supplying prescription medication to patients without a prescription. | Supplying prescription medication to patients without a prescription. | |
| The lack of proper labelling of medication from medications supplied from community pharmacies. | |||
| Communication and information exchange | Patients not providing full information about their health condition. | Patients not providing full information about their health condition. | Patients not providing full information about their health condition. |
| _ | The lack of information provided by pharmacists in the form of counselling. | _ | |
| The lack of clear, understandable spoken medication information in Arabic provided to patients. | |||
| Patient behaviour | Lack of patient awareness of medication safety problems. | Lack of patient awareness of medication safety problems. | Patients diagnosing and treating themselves independently of any healthcare professional. |
| Medication | Look-alike medication or sound-alike medication, which are medicine brand names that look or sound the same as other medicine brand names when written or spoken. | Look-alike medication or sound-alike medication, which are medicine brand names that look or sound the same as other medicine brand names when written or spoken. | _ |
| Patient characteristics | Patients with long-term conditions. | Patients using multiple medications. | Older patients. |
Participants' completion rates across three rounds
| Round number | Participants completion rate |
| R1+R2+R3 | 61 (102) |
| R1+R2 | 8 (13) |
| R1+R3 | 5 (9) |
| R2+R3 | 0.6 (1) |
| R1* | 22 (37) |
| R2* | 2 (4) |
| R3* | 0 |
| Total number of participants | 166 |
*Responders who only responded to this round.
R1, Round 1; R2, Round 2.