| Literature DB >> 34599720 |
Aziza Alenezi1, Asma Yahyouche2, Vibhu Paudyal1.
Abstract
Background Opioid are currently widely used to manage chronic non-malignant pain (CNMP), but there is a growing concern about harm resulting from opioid misuse and the need for medicine optimization, in which pharmacists could potentially play a key role. Objective This study explored pharmacists' roles, barriers and determinants related to their involvement in optimizing prescribed opioids for patients with chronic pain. Setting Community pharmacies in the United Kingdom. Method Semi-structured interviews based on the Theoretical Domains Framework were conducted between January and May 2020 with 20 community pharmacists recruited through professional networks. Data were analysed thematically. Main outcome measure: Pharmacists' perceived roles, barriers and behavioural determinants in relation to opioid therapy optimization. Result Pharmacists demonstrated desire to contribute to opioid therapy optimization. However, they described that they were often challenged by the lack of relevant knowledge, skills and training, inadequate time and resources, systemic constraints (such as lack of access to medical records and information about diagnosis), and other barriers including relationships with doctors and patients. Conclusion The contribution of community pharmacists to optimize opioid therapy in CNMP is unclear and impeded by lack of appropriate training and systemic constraints. There is a need to develop innovative practice models by addressing the barriers identified in this study to enhance the contribution of community pharmacists in optimization of opioid therapy for chronic pain.Entities:
Keywords: Chronic pain; Community pharmacists; Medicine optimization; Opioid; Qualitative; Theoretical domains framework
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34599720 PMCID: PMC8486957 DOI: 10.1007/s11096-021-01331-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Clin Pharm
Fig. 1Study sample recruitment flowchart. Note PIS: Participant Information Sheet, CF: Consent Form
Mapping of interview schedule to TDF domains
| Domain | Content | Sample questions as applied to this study |
|---|---|---|
| Knowledge | An awareness of the existence of something | What does chronic opioid therapy optimization mean to you? What are the knowledge barriers to optimizing opioid therapy for chronic pain? |
| Skills | An ability or proficiency acquired through practice | When considering filling a prescription for an opioid, how do you evaluate patient risk for misuse? What training have you had in how to appropriately review opioid prescription and identify opioid-related abuse and misuse? |
| Social/professional role and identity | A coherent set of behaviours and displayed personal qualities of an individual in a social or work setting | What are your general thoughts about dispensing opioid prescriptions? |
| Beliefs about capabilities | Acceptance of the truth, reality, or validity about an ability, talent, or facility that a person can put to constructive use | How can pharmacists contribute in recognizing the various forms of opioid abuse and misuse and in preventing inappropriate prescribing and diversion of opioids? |
| Optimism | The confidence that things will happen for the best or that desired goals will be attained | How optimistic are you that the use of e-prescription or prescription monitoring programmes will reduce inappropriate use of opioids? |
| Beliefs about consequences | Acceptance of the truth, reality, or validity about outcomes of a behaviour in a given situation | What are the advantages and disadvantages of opioid prescription review for each patient/ education about opioid to identify problematic medication use? |
| Reinforcement | Increasing the probability of a response by arranging a dependent relationship, or contingency, between the response and a given stimulus | How does your experience (good or bad) of reviewing opioid prescriptions/ education about the opioids in the past influence whether or not you would do it again? |
| Intentions | A conscious decision to perform a behaviour or a resolve to act in a certain way | Do you intend to review each opioid prescription and assess misuse and abuse? Why do you feel this way? |
| Goals | Mental representations of outcomes or end state that an individual wants to achieve | Do you think optimizing chronic opioid therapy is a personal goal or an institutional goal? What factors may interfere with the goal? |
| Memory, attention, and decision processes | The ability to retain information, focus selectively on aspects of the environment and choose between 2 or more alternatives | What reasons might prompt you to decide to carefully assess opioid-related abuse and misuse and review an opioid prescription? |
| Environmental context and resources | Any circumstance of a person's situation or environment that discourages or encourages the development of skills and abilities, independence, social competence, and adaptive behaviours | To what degree do resources and physical context influence your careful review of opioid prescription /education about the opioids? |
| Emotion | A complex reaction pattern involving experiential, behavioural, and physiological elements, by which the individual attempts to deal with a personally significant matter or event | How confident are you when dispensing high dose opioid prescription? How does this feeling influence what you do? |
| Social influences | Any circumstance of a person’s situation or environment that discourages or encourages the development of skills and abilities, independence, social competence, and adaptive behaviour | Tell me about your communication with prescribers regarding opioid prescriptions. When you need to contact the prescriber, are they accessible? What do you do if you cannot reach the prescriber? |
| Behavioural regulation | Anything aimed at managing or changing objectively observed or measured actions | What additional strategies do you think might mitigate inappropriate opioid use among CNMP patients? |
Distribution of participants (N = 20)
| Location | N |
|---|---|
| London | 2 |
| Birmingham | 2 |
| Bradford | 2 |
| Leicester | 2 |
| Hull | 2 |
| Stourbridge | 1 |
| Solihull | 1 |
| Normanton | 1 |
| Coventry | 1 |
| Wakefield | 1 |
| Hemel hempstead | 1 |
| Sunbury-on-Thames | 1 |
| Missing information | 3 |
Sample characteristics (N = 20)
| Characteristics | N |
|---|---|
| Community pharmacist | 16 |
| Community pharmacist and manager | 1 |
| Community and hospital pharmacist | 3 |
| Male | 17 |
| Female | 3 |
| 25–35 | 16 |
| 36–45 | 3 |
| 46–60 | 1 |
| 1–5 | 11 |
| 6–10 | 3 |
| 11–15 | 4 |
| 20 + | 2 |
Theoretical domains relevant to community pharmacists’ role in prescribed opioid optimisation with illustrative quotations
| Theme | TDF domains & non-TDF subtheme | Codes/constructs | Illustrative quotations |
|---|---|---|---|
| Pharmacists’ self- perception | Social and prof role and identity | Primary guardian of patient welfare | Obviously, I am a pharmacist, and so my interest is always in patient health and patient's outcome (Participant 2) |
| Secondary role | We’re not involved in it directly… It would be totally the medicine management team at the surgery … “As a pharmacist, you would intervene by highlighting it to the doctor because the doctor is going to take the decision at the end of the day (Participant 17) | ||
| Safeguarding action | I would say it is part of my job to check whether they are… the amount that he was taking, Oramorph, isn't going to cause him on overdose or a serious reaction with alcohol misuse (Participant 14) | ||
| Capabilities | Knowledge | Knowledge of condition/scientific rationale | Opioids are not for chronic use ……they’re only when needed….in a flare-up or acute pain (Participant 8) |
| Skills | Skills development through training | We did cover the guidelines, but it was quite some time ago (Participant 17) | |
| Experience | Tell if someone's misusing but, that's just from experience… or like, you know, intuition kind of thing. You would usually know anyway (Participant 14) | ||
| Beliefs about capabilities | Empowerment (lack of) | It's currently, it's impossible to monitor and optimize opioid, opioid treatments. (Participant 18) | |
| Infrastructure and systemic constructs | Environmental context and resources | Barriers: Information | Without access to medical records …. that’d probably be a barrier. (Participant 19) |
| Funding and resources | The, erm, funding, I think that it’s one of the things that they probably might need to kind of fund to sort of, as a service…. (Participant 3) | ||
| Systems | There's nothing stopping that patient taking their prescription to another pharmacy (Participant 10) | ||
| E-prescriptions | They might not have the time to …do proper checks to make sure… and they might just print it (Participant 5) | ||
| Personal factors | Social Influences | Inter-group conflict with GP | That, I think, [causes]frustrations with all community pharmacists because we don’t have, erm, I think professional to professional communication between prescribers and pharmacist, so …..patients have to come back the next day or a few days after ……if there is a single piece of information that we need to clarify or double-check. Sometimes……you have to call back two, three times, and you still can’t get an answer. The patients might have to take their prescription somewhere else…. I think there’s a huge barrier between pharmacists and prescribers (Participant 13) |
| With patients | Obviously, if you have a bad experience with a patient, then sometimes you think twice about something, you know, doing something (Participant 11) | ||
| Emotion | Empathy | If [I] find out that the patient is misusing other substances with the opioid ….I'd be worried about them ( Participant 4) | |
| Stress | Monitoring and talking to every patient and keeping tabs is going to be a very strenuous task, that would be very stressful ( Participant 6) |