Patient Experiences of Community Pharmacy Medication Supply and Medicines Reconciliation at Hospital Discharge: A Pilot Qualitative Study.

IF 2 Q3 PHARMACOLOGY & PHARMACY
Pharmacy Pub Date : 2024-04-10 DOI:10.3390/pharmacy12020066
Rhona Mundell, Derek Jamieson, Gwen Shaw, Anne Thomson, P. Forsyth
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Abstract

(1) Background: As part of the Scottish Government's five-year recovery plan to address the backlog in NHS care following the COVID-19 pandemic, community pharmacies in Scotland are planned to provide a Hospital Discharge Medicines Supply and Medicines Reconciliation Service. We aimed to qualitatively explore patients' experiences with this new service. (2) Method: Adult patients (≥18 years age) who consented to participate in the Community Pharmacy Hospital Discharge and Medicines Reconciliation Service were invited for an interview within 21 days of discharge from hospital. Qualitative, one-to-one, semi-structured patient interviews were conducted by telephone and audio-recorded using Microsoft Teams®. The interview audio recordings were transcribed verbatim and underwent thematic analysis. (3) Results: Twelve patients were interviewed, evenly split by sex and with a median age of 62 years (range 36 to 88 years). Our analysis generated main five themes: patient engagement, stakeholder communication, practical factors, human factors, and comparative experiences. Many of these were interdependent. (4) Conclusions: Patients appreciated that the service ensured a quicker discharge from hospital. Good stakeholder communication, practical factors (including choice, location, and the realities of obtaining their medication from the community pharmacy), and a pre-existing and trusted relationship in their usual community pharmacy were the key factors that regulated the patient experience. Generally, patients were positive about the introduction of this new service. However, the lack of a previous relationship or trust with a community pharmacy, and previous experiences with medication supply problems were factors which had the potential to negatively impact patient experiences.
出院时患者对社区药房药物供应和药物核对的体验:一项试点定性研究。
(1) 背景:作为苏格兰政府五年恢复计划的一部分,苏格兰社区药房计划提供出院药品供应和药品调配服务,以解决 COVID-19 大流行后 NHS 护理工作的积压问题。我们的目的是对患者使用这项新服务的体验进行定性研究。(2) 方法:邀请同意参加社区药房出院和药品调配服务的成年患者(年龄≥ 18 岁)在出院后 21 天内接受访谈。定性、一对一、半结构化的患者访谈通过电话进行,并使用 Microsoft Teams® 进行录音。访谈录音被逐字转录并进行了主题分析。(3) 结果:12 名患者接受了访谈,性别各占一半,年龄中位数为 62 岁(36 至 88 岁不等)。我们的分析产生了五大主题:患者参与、利益相关者沟通、实际因素、人为因素和比较经验。其中许多主题是相互依存的。(4) 结论:患者对该服务能确保他们更快出院表示赞赏。利益相关者的良好沟通、实际因素(包括选择、地点、从社区药房取药的实际情况)以及与患者常去的社区药房之间预先存在的信任关系是影响患者体验的关键因素。总体而言,患者对这项新服务的推出持积极态度。然而,与社区药房缺乏关系或信任,以及以前遇到过药物供应问题,这些因素都有可能对患者的体验产生负面影响。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Pharmacy
Pharmacy PHARMACOLOGY & PHARMACY-
自引率
9.10%
发文量
141
审稿时长
11 weeks
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