| Literature DB >> 33944640 |
Rabih Soubra1, Sani Hlais2, Nadine Houmani1, Lina Ghandour1, Reda El Haj Hassan1, Mohammed Joujou1, Issam Shaarani1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Understanding health-seeking behaviour could significantly reduce the impact of illness on patients' lives. Fragmentation of the Lebanese healthcare system and presence of variability in socio-economic factors have affected some aspects of the Lebanese population's overall health seeking behaviour. One of these aspects is seeking diagnosis from pharmacists, which is prohibited by the Lebanese law but reinforced by the absence of supervision of concerned authorities.Entities:
Keywords: Health-seeking behaviour; general practitioner; healthcare system; pharmacist; primary care
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33944640 PMCID: PMC8816400 DOI: 10.1080/13814788.2021.1917541
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur J Gen Pract ISSN: 1381-4788 Impact factor: 1.904
Demographic information of the study participants and association with seeking diagnosis from pharmacists.
| Demographic factors* | Seeking diagnosis from pharmacists | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Total | Often/Always | No/Rarely | ||
| Age groups (years) |
| |||
| 21–29 | 182 (37.1%) | 94 (51.9%) | 87 (48.1%) | |
| 30–49 | 181 (36.9%) | 98 (54.1%) | 83 (45.9%) | |
| 50–64 | 93 (18.9%) | 37 (40.2%) | 55 (59.8%) | |
| >65 | 35 (7.1%) | 11 (31.4%) | 24 (68.6%) | |
| Gender | 0.147 | |||
| Male | 269 (54.6%) | 123 (45.9%) | 145 (54.1) | |
| Female | 224 (45.4%) | 117 (52.5%) | 106 (47.5) | |
| Level of education |
| |||
| School education or less | 207 (42.1%) | 114 (55.1%) | 93 (44.9%) | |
| College education | 285 (57.9%) | 125 (44.2%) | 158 (55.8) | |
| Medical professionals |
| |||
| Health professionals | 16 (4.5%) | 2 (12.5%) | 14 (87.5%) | |
| Non-health professionals | 338 (95.5%) | 172 (51%) | 165 (49%) | |
| Average family income per montha |
| |||
| <500 USD | 84 (17.1%) | 48 (57.1%) | 36 (42.9%) | |
| 500–1000 USD | 181 (36.9%) | 95 (52.5%) | 86 (47.5%) | |
| 1000–2000 USD | 156 (31.8%) | 78 (50%) | 78 (50%) | |
| >2000 USD | 69 (14.1%) | 18 (26.1%) | 51(73.9%) | |
| Health insurance status |
| |||
| Insured | 338 (68.8%) | 149 (44.1%) | 189 (55.9%) | |
| Not insured | 153 (31.2%) | 91 (59.5%) | 62 (40.5%) | |
| Availability of a general practitioner visited regularly |
| |||
| Yes | 177 (36.1%) | 72 (40.7%) | 105 (59.3%) | |
| No | 313 (63.9%) | 168 (53.7%) | 145 (46.3%) | |
*Total does not count always to 493 due to missing data; Rate of 1USD equals 1507.5LBP at the time of data collection; Marital status, governorate of residence, number of children in household, employment status, type of health coverage, coverage of prescribed drugs, and coverage of visit to doctor not represented as they were not significantly associated with the outcome variable
Bold values are significant p-values.
Knowledge of participants regarding the Order of Pharmacists in Lebanon (OPL) laws and the role of the pharmacists.
| Assessment of knowledge | Total answered | Answered correctly |
|---|---|---|
| OPL laws do not allow pharmacists to prescribe | 492 | 222 (45.1%) |
| There is a law forbidding the Lebanese pharmacist to diagnose | 492 | 88 (17.9 %) |
| Pharmacist should provide health care education and advise safe use of medications | 491 | 348 (70.9%) |
| Pharmacist should formulate and distribute drugs | 491 | 218 (44.4%) |
| Pharmacist should dispense drugs based on a medical doctor’s prescription | 491 | 438 (89.2%) |
| Pharmacist should not diagnose chronic diseases and prescribe a treatment regimen | 491 | 444 (90.4%) |
| Pharmacist should not dispense drugs without prescription | 491 | 437 (89.0%) |
| Pharmacist should not suture lacerations | 491 | 422 (85.9%) |
| Pharmacist should not deal with health emergencies (such as injuries, burns…etc.) | 491 | 292 (59.5%) |
Figure 1.Factors influencing decision to seek medical care from pharmacist (N = 493**). *Total does not count always to 493 due to missing data. **Participants were able to select all that apply.
Unadjusted and adjusted Odds Ratios of seeking diagnosis from pharmacists by some demographic and healthcare coverage variables.
| Variables | Unadjusted OR | 95% CI for unadjusted OR | Adjusted OR | 95% CI for adjusted OR | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age | ||||||
| 21–29 | 1 | – | 0.021 | 1 | – | 0.08 |
| 30–49 | 1.09 | (0.72, 1.65) | 1.01 | (0.57, 1.77) | ||
| 50–64 | 0.62 | (0.37, 1.03) | 0.56 | (0.29, 1.07) | ||
| >65 | 0.42 | (0.19, 0.91) | 0.32 | (0.08, 1.20) | ||
| Gender | ||||||
| Male | 1 | – | 0.14 | 1 | – | 0.51 |
| Female | 1.30 | (0.91, 1.85) | 1.17 | (0.71, 1.92) | ||
| Education | ||||||
| School education or less | 1 | – | 0.017 | 1 | – | 0.51 |
| College education | 0.64 | (0.45, 0.92) | 0.84 | (0.52, 1.41) | ||
| Governorate | ||||||
| Beirut | 1 | – | 0.125 | 1 | – | 0.31 |
| North | 1.18 | (0.66, 2.08) | 1.41 | (0.68, 2.92) | ||
| South | 1.29 | (0.73, 2.27) | 1.68 | (0.80, 3.52) | ||
| Beqaa | 0.90 | (0.50, 1.63) | 0.78 | (0.36, 1.69) | ||
| Mount Lebanon | 0.60 | (0.32, 1.12) | 0.74 | (0.34, 1.62) | ||
| Nabatieh | 0.65 | (0.35, 1.22) | 1.04 | (0.46, 2.35) | ||
| Job health professionals | ||||||
| Health professionals | 1 | – | 0.003 | 1 | – | 0.06 |
| Non-health Professionals | 7.29 | (1.63, 32.6) | 4.45 | (0.92, 21.50) | ||
| Income | ||||||
| <500 USD | 1 | – | 0.001 | 1 | – | 0.10 |
| 500–1000 USD | 0.82 | (0.49, 1.39) | 0.77 | (0.37, 1.59) | ||
| 1000–2000 USD | 0.75 | (0.43, 1.27) | 0.96 | (0.44, 2.10) | ||
| >2000 USD | 0.26 | (0.13, 0.52) | 0.36 | (0.13, 0.97) | ||
| Medical insurance | ||||||
| Insured | 1 | – | 0.002 | 1 | – | 0.08 |
| Not insured | 0.53 | (0.36, 0.79) | 0.63 | (0.37, 1.07) | ||
| Availability of a general practitioner visited regularly | ||||||
| No | 1 | – | 0.006 | 1 | – | 0.02 |
| Yes | 0.59 | (0.40, 0.85) | 0.57 | (0.35, 0.93) |
*p-Value for bivariate analysis; **p-value for multivariate analysis.
Figure 2.Conditions for which pharmacists were visited to get health care (N = 493**). *Conditions apply to females only. **Total does not count always to 493 due to missing data