| Literature DB >> 35428578 |
Lucas Kosobuski, Andrew Hawn, Katelyn France, Nathaniel Chen, Cierra LaPlante, Laura Palombi.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic has had a disproportionately negative impact on individuals with a substance use disorder (SUD). A rapidly changing public health and treatment environment has resulted in increased needs for pharmacist engagement in SUD-focused patient care.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35428578 PMCID: PMC8933963 DOI: 10.1016/j.japh.2022.03.014
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Am Pharm Assoc (2003) ISSN: 1086-5802
Demographics of interviewees
| Interviewee practice characteristics | Number of interviewees identified with each professional role |
|---|---|
| Area of focus in current professional role | Public health (6) |
| Number of counties served | 1 county (19) |
Abbreviation used: SUD, substance use disorder.
Domains and subdomains with no. mentions from participants
| Domains | Subdomains | Domain explanations |
|---|---|---|
| Pharmacists as educators of patients and communities | Patient/medication Counseling: 15 | Areas that interviewees identified as places where more education could be provided by pharmacists with regard to both patient and the community |
| Pharmacists as educators of health care providers | General SUD: 6 | Areas that interviewees identified as places where more education could be provided to other health care providers by pharmacists |
| Pharmacists as advocates for individuals with SUD | MAT use: 6 | Areas that pharmacists could advocate for systemic change as identified by interviewees |
| The need for increased pharmacist engagement owing to COVID-19 challenges for individuals with SUD | Reduced outreach: 7 | Areas that interviewees identified related to the COVID-19 pandemic and its impact on SUD |
| The need for expanded pharmacy practice interventions | Telehealth services: 6 | Areas where more pharmacy practice intervention and innovation is needed owing to COVID-19 as identified by interviewees |
| The need for pharmacist self-development | Addressing own stigma: 8 | Steps that interviewees believe that pharmacists should take to become more actively involved in SUD treatment |
Abbreviations used: SUD, substance use disorder; MAT, medication assisted treatment or medications for opioid use disorder; COVID-19, coronavirus disease 2019.
Quotes from interviewees
| Subdomain | Representative quotes |
|---|---|
| Patient/medication counseling | “I think that’s what we that pharmacists can help to is to really understand how the drugs, how the medications work, and then help people to understand kind of those nuances of what they're feeling and experiencing.” |
| “Providing educational materials for all patients that are prescribed an opioid and offering naloxone to those patients as well and educating them about the risk of overdose.” | |
| General SUD | “so the pharmacy could just help, Naloxone, MAT, clean needles. And, you know, like, probably help train the community or change social norms around that demographic of people” |
| “I really also like how much, and it could just be the group that I’ve met, but how much effort has been put in for pharmacists to be presenting at conferences and engaged in community level change.” | |
| Mental health | “I would like to see some programming that would teach kids health and address mental health and wraparound services.” |
| “I think that when people see that trusted person as somebody going out into the community, and you know, taking on some of these big issues, mental health and substance use. And I think that’s a good thing.” | |
| Stigma | “I think that looking at the recovery community, so people within the recovery community, there’s still a lot of stigma around, you know, oh, you’re on suboxone or you’re on medically assisted treatments, like that should not be.” |
| “And so, again, there’s a lot of stigma associated with IV drug users, so like a lot of places don’t want to help this individual. And so there’s a lot of education and understanding that needs to happen around that aspect, and looking at the problem objectively, and how best to address it using data-driven responses.” | |
| Harm reduction | “Ya know, is it, um, as a community pharmacy ya know advocate for some Naloxone training in your community, um, make sure you have a good functioning, working program in your community pharmacy to get NARCAN to your patients.” |
| “Educating like the community but also other professionals on like the realities of MAT, because there’s still so many people even in the professional realm that think it’s replacing one drug for another and don’t see it like truly as harm reduction.” | |
| General SUD (HP) | “Prevention programs...I just think education. And I think education for the professionals.” |
| “Off the top of my head, the only one that I can think of is just, like I was saying, about MAT, to have more education..., for the public around that, and for the providers.” | |
| Harm reduction (HP) | “I think one of the areas that pharmacy students or staff could help with is education around medicated, MAT... there’s some providers that are prescribing this, these medications and not doing a lot of good follow up work to get them weaned off.” |
| “Educating like the community but also other professionals on like the realities of MAT, because there’s still so many people even in the professional realm that think it’s replacing one drug for another and don’t see it like truly as harm reduction.” | |
| MAT use | “I think advocacy and education around MAT. And just showing folks that it’s effective, getting people more access to it. Educating like the community but also other professionals on like the realities of MAT, because there’s still so many people even in the professional realm that think it’s replacing one drug for another and don’t see it like truly as harm reduction.” |
| “I also think with the pharmacy, just meet at a better understanding and education of medication assisted therapies and treatments. It’s really important for the community because I think up to probably a year ago, I’m a perfect example of somebody who would walk around, saying you’re just substituting one drug for another, like that’s not okay. But when I looked at the science behind it and get, you know, get a little more educated around what it is doing and how it can really benefit people and their loved ones.” | |
| Harm reduction | “They should be, first, doing no harm, and they should be providing syringes to people, no questions asked…. And pharmacies, you know, what a wonderful opportunity to engage with people on other health-related issues, to dispense Narcan, to talk about drug interactions, there’s so much that could happen” |
| “There’s not a whole lot of access to harm reduction services like Naloxone, and clean needles, condoms, you know. And so, I guess I’m to make creating easier access to MAT, creating easier access to clean needles, creating easier access to Suboxone, Methadone or whatever I’m at, but also access to Naloxone, and training people and community members on Naloxone, how to recognize overdose, how to prevent it, how to administer Narcan” | |
| Decreased cost | “When somebody has to pay $125 for a box a nasal I mean that’s quite a bit but...and you know, most people, you know they don’t have that kind of money but...you know, then you think about trying to save your loved one. I mean, what are you going to do?” |
| “I do feel like things are high price.” | |
| Reduced outreach | “the lack of services that are out there readily available for people, so like support groups shut down, training shut down, all of these different in person things that help combat the opiate epidemic stopped, and services were limited and everything was switched to zoom, and that's not a good way for people to connect and learn and grow.” |
| “Extended outreach if at all possible just because of the isolation that our, our citizens or community members are dealing with. It’s, you know, it’s so imperative that information and or some type of contact, support contact be available.” | |
| Decreased mental health | “I’ve seen a lot more cases coming through of people just sitting in their home using substances, as a way to self medicate the depression or just something to do or the fill the void of being social and doing social activities.” |
| “I hear about mental health problems, especially around Christmas. So that’s not helpful in 2021, but people staying at home, and having to deal with whatever they’re thinking in their head it’s hard to reach out and show compassion and show people that they matter in that time.” | |
| Increased overdoses | “I think that there’s changing dynamics for pharmacies right now and wonderful opportunities to take advantage of them, generate goodwill and a healthier community, right, not only COVID but all the overdose deaths that are just piling up and deaths of despair in Duluth.” |
| “But the amount of people and deaths that has happened from heroin overdoses are all preventable, and there’s a significant need to reach the population of people that are dying.” | |
| Isolation | “whats really important in this interesting time of COVID, where there’s more isolation and more distance is knowing that addiction can often become more troublesome in isolation whenever there’s less opportunity for connection” |
| “Because of just unforeseen isolation, Im seeing the same two or three people every day for 10 months working at home. Theres a lot of people in the same boat, and prior to COVID, I was in a large room with 40 people around me working in cubicles. It was social. It was bright. It was kind of that we were a part of workforce and talked to each other a bit and worked with each other, and now thats gone.” | |
| Decreased accessibility | “One of the biggest problems is that, you know, with telemedicine, and you guys do that right. I mean, I’m not everybody has access. And so a lot of our patients especially here, you know at our clinic, we have, like the highest no show rate in town and probably the least connected group of patients in town. And yet, we have to try to get them connected and we can’t. So our visit rate and our no show rate has gone up.” |
| “I think we need...I think the need that has brought has been brought to my attention is the lack of awareness for access to, whether its connectivity, or more data, or a plan that allows people to connect virtually, and some of the platforms require a bit of usage and so we find when people are living within their means.” | |
| Virtual learning curve | “i think the role of the pharmacist has gotten much harder too, just in that there is more virtual work, and all the logistics that go into pulling off a virtual meeting or consult with the patient is a lot harder to do” |
| Telehealth services | “So a happy medium would be to have zoom community platforms or something where people can come on and talk about things like a town hall situation where education or prevention information could get out” |
| “the role of the pharmacist becomes even more important in terms of - when we’re looking at access and knowing that there’s more opportunity via telehealth for providers to prescribe” | |
| Harm reduction services | “Pharmacists need to start taking the tools and the opportunities that they have been afforded and put in the work: opportunities for harm reduction work” |
| “And these are all just so valuable because it’s empowering people, giving people access to Narcan and the ability to use it should a family member misuse accidentally or, you know, or intentionally overdose on an opioid and yet the number of lives that you know have been saved” | |
| Prevention services | “I mean, I’d like to see more programs open up and that takes more counselors. So I’d like to see a bunch of counselors get trained, like to see more programs open up and other programs grow” |
| Mental health services | “some anxiety is normal. And what we need to normalize is how you address it, and how you work through it, which is harder to do than just using recreational drugs or alcohol.” |
| School/youth intervention (K-12) | “I think if it’s (education) coming from law enforcement, it may be looked at more of a criminalized side where if it’s coming from an education institution or medical institution then it would be more medicalized than moralized.” |
| Collaboration with SUD | “when we bring professionals with that level of understanding that also understand recovery and substance use disorder in a way that’s non judgmental, we can lend credibility to the conversations and the awareness that we’re providing out in the community.” |
| Addressing own stigma | “And traditionally, my experience is that pharmacies are really afraid of people they perceive as this stereotype of a junkie that are going to clean out the cash drawer, and they think that by not embracing them, they are keeping them out of their store, which is misguided, at best” |
| “but they (faculty name) surveyed all the pharmacists and, and the responses were very concerning in terms of stigma related to naloxone.” | |
| Role acknowledgment in SUD | “The biggest role is they need to start taking the tools and the opportunities that they have been afforded and putting in the work. Plain and simple.” |
| “But I think pharmacists and pharmacies have a position to call out abuse of prescriptions. I think as part of their code of ethics they would and could, but I think a lot of pharmacies lost track of that.” | |
| Consultation availability | “So, since they’re administering the drugs, maybe they feel like a middleman, which could be utilized more to do education.” |
| “so you know taking that little extra effort for those people you know might be struggling or identified as higher needs that someone takes that little bit of time to reach out and connect or, or even just offers that when you come to pick up your prescription, ‘hey do you need a consult, we can connect you via phone.’” |
Abbreviations used: SUD, substance use disorder; MAT, medication assisted treatment; COVID, coronavirus disease; IV, intravenous; NARCAN, naloxone.
| Questions | Probes |
|---|---|
| How are you currently connected with individuals experiencing Substance Use Disorder? | SUD prevention SUD treatment SUD recovery Harm reduction Concerned community member (includes family members of individuals with SUD) |
| What county in Minnesota do you identify with most closely? | County of residence/association, note that this may be multiple counties based on their role |
| On a scale of 0-5, how involved have you been with individuals from universities and/or higher education in the past 5 years, with 0 being not involved at all, and 5 being very involved? | Very involved = 5 |
| What do you think that the University and/or higher education should be doing to support individuals with Substance Use Disorder (or at risk of SUD?) | If asked, options could include: |
| What do you think the profession of pharmacy’s role in supporting individuals with SUD (or at risk of SUD) should be? | Pharmacy care/treatment |
| Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, what Drug Prevention activities or program areas would you like to see prioritized in 2021? | SUD prevention activity/program focus areas |
| What is your preferred email address to receive your Amazon gift card? | May need to be personal email address rather than work address, note this on spreadsheet |
| Are there any other persons you know that you feel would be good to reach out to for this research project? | Other individuals to interview should be added to spreadsheet |