负担能力作为处方药障碍的生活经验:一项纵向定性研究

IF 1.8 Q3 PHARMACOLOGY & PHARMACY
Pauline Norris , Shirley Keown , Molly George , Vanda Symon , Rosalina Richards , Sandhaya Bhawan , Lauralie Richard
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引用次数: 0

摘要

在许多国家,缺乏可负担性是获得药物的主要障碍。它可能导致药物使用中的种族和其他不平等,新西兰已经记录了这些。我们的目的是了解可能遇到这些障碍的群体在获取药物方面面临的障碍的生活经历,并探索这些障碍是如何随着时间的推移而产生的。本文给出了与可负担性相关的结果。方法采用纵向定性研究方法,在一年多的时间里,对21户家庭的生活和药品获取情况进行了反复访谈。参与者为收入有限的Māori、太平洋地区、前难民或Pākehā(新西兰欧洲人)。结果许多参与者面临社会劣势,许多参与者存在身体和心理健康问题。通常,他们的生活忙碌而紧张,这就形成了药物问题的背景。对全科医生和药品收费可能会直接阻碍人们获得服务,但也会破坏与医疗保健提供者的关系,降低服务的可接受性。他们可能会对收费感到困惑,当他们被认为是不合理的时候,参与者会感到委屈。在研究期间,大多数(但不是全部)药店都有处方收费,有限的财政资源促使一些参与者选择药店。一些人感到被迫在费用和实际可及性或护理质量之间做出选择。缺乏负担能力还与其他获取障碍相互作用,例如缺乏交通工具,从而无法获得所需的药物。缺乏负担能力也使参与者更容易受到处方和分发中的小错误的影响。讨论探讨生活经验可以深入了解缺乏负担能力阻碍获得药物的多种方式:直接地,通过与交通等其他获取障碍的相互作用,通过损害信任和降低服务的可接受性,以及通过使参与者更无法处理卫生专业人员所犯的错误。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Lived experience of affordability as a barrier to prescription medicines: A longitudinal qualitative study

Background

Lack of affordability is a major barrier to medicines access in many countries. It can result in ethnic and other inequities in medicines use and these have been documented in New Zealand. We aimed to understand the lived experience of barriers to accessing medicines faced by groups that are likely to encounter them, and to explore how they played out over time. This paper presents results related to affordability.

Methods

We carried out a longitudinal qualitative study, repeatedly interviewing 21 households about their lives and access to medicines, over a year. Participants were Māori, Pacific, former refugee, or Pākehā (New Zealand Europeans) with limited incomes.

Results

Many participants faced social disadvantage and many had physical and mental health problems. Often, they had busy and stressful lives, and this formed the backdrop to issues with medicines. Charges for GPs and medicines could directly prevent access, but also eroded relationships with healthcare providers, reducing acceptability of services. There could be confusion about charges, and when they were perceived as unreasonable participants felt aggrieved. At the time of the study, most (but not all) pharmacies had prescription charges, and limited financial resources drove some participants' choice of pharmacy. Some felt forced to choose between cost and physical accessibility or quality of care. Lack of affordability also interacted with other barriers to access, such as lack of transport, to prevent access to needed medications. Lack of affordability also made participants more vulnerable to the impact of small mistakes in prescribing and dispensing.

Discussion

Exploring lived experience provides insights into the multiple ways that lack of affordability prevents access to medicines: directly, through interaction with other barriers to access including transport, by damaging trust and reducing acceptability of services, and by making participants less able to deal with mistakes made by health professionals.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.60
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