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Qualitative study using interviews and focus groups to explore the current and potential for antimicrobial stewardship in community pharmacy informed by the Theoretical Domains Framework

Qualitative study using interviews and focus groups to explore the current and potential for antimicrobial stewardship in community pharmacy informed by the Theoretical Domains Framework
Qualitative study using interviews and focus groups to explore the current and potential for antimicrobial stewardship in community pharmacy informed by the Theoretical Domains Framework
Objectives: Community pharmacists and their staff have the potential to contribute to antimicrobial stewardship (AMS). However, their barriers and opportunities are not well understood. The aim was to investigate the experiences and perceptions of community pharmacists and their teams around AMS to inform intervention development.

Design: Interviews and focus groups were used to explore the views of pharmacists, pharmacy staff, general practitioners (GPs), members of pharmacy organisations and commissioners. The questioning schedule was developed using the Theoretical Domains Framework which helped inform recommendations to facilitate AMS in community pharmacy.

Results: 8 GPs, 28 pharmacists, 13 pharmacy staff, 6 representatives from pharmacy organisations in England and Wales, and 2 local stakeholders participated. Knowledge and skills both facilitated or hindered provision of self-care and compliance advice by different grades of pharmacy staff. Some staff were not aware of the impact of giving self-care and compliance advice to help control antimicrobial resistance (AMR). The pharmacy environment created barriers to AMS; this included lack of time of well-qualified staff leading to misinformation from underskilled staff to patients about the need for antibiotics or the need to visit the GP, this was exacerbated by lack of space. AMS activities were limited by absent diagnoses on antibiotic prescriptions. Several pharmacy staff felt that undertaking patient examinations, questioning the rationale for antibiotic prescriptions and performing audits would allow them to provide more tailored AMS advice.

Conclusions: Interventions are required to overcome a lack of qualified staff, time and space to give patients AMS advice. Staff need to understand how self-care and antibiotic compliance advice can help control AMR. A multifaceted educational intervention including information for staff with feedback about the advice given may help. Indication for a prescription would enable pharmacists to provide more targeted antibiotic advice. Commissioners should consider the pharmacists? role in examining patients, and giving advice about antibiotic prescriptions.
2044-6055
Jones, Leah Ffion
72ab5964-52a6-416e-adee-34ef97cf2724
Owens, Rebecca
384bbfa3-c233-49cf-a755-e23d9df5850e
Sallis, Anna
99be85ec-9cb9-4898-8bb4-b484deefe55e
Ashiru-Oredope, Diane
ca399b9f-8cf1-4b0c-85ac-9d395de53ed3
Thornley, Tracey
4702d033-a01d-4589-9107-74e3b48fa80d
Francis, Nick A.
9b610883-605c-4fee-871d-defaa86ccf8e
Butler, Chris
95583b3d-b015-42de-ba2d-10de4ba67707
McNulty, Cliodna A.M.
efcc95ca-272c-4e8f-aa2d-189d59acfc48
Jones, Leah Ffion
72ab5964-52a6-416e-adee-34ef97cf2724
Owens, Rebecca
384bbfa3-c233-49cf-a755-e23d9df5850e
Sallis, Anna
99be85ec-9cb9-4898-8bb4-b484deefe55e
Ashiru-Oredope, Diane
ca399b9f-8cf1-4b0c-85ac-9d395de53ed3
Thornley, Tracey
4702d033-a01d-4589-9107-74e3b48fa80d
Francis, Nick A.
9b610883-605c-4fee-871d-defaa86ccf8e
Butler, Chris
95583b3d-b015-42de-ba2d-10de4ba67707
McNulty, Cliodna A.M.
efcc95ca-272c-4e8f-aa2d-189d59acfc48

Jones, Leah Ffion, Owens, Rebecca, Sallis, Anna, Ashiru-Oredope, Diane, Thornley, Tracey, Francis, Nick A., Butler, Chris and McNulty, Cliodna A.M. (2018) Qualitative study using interviews and focus groups to explore the current and potential for antimicrobial stewardship in community pharmacy informed by the Theoretical Domains Framework. BMJ Open, 8 (12). (doi:10.1136/bmjopen-2018-025101).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Objectives: Community pharmacists and their staff have the potential to contribute to antimicrobial stewardship (AMS). However, their barriers and opportunities are not well understood. The aim was to investigate the experiences and perceptions of community pharmacists and their teams around AMS to inform intervention development.

Design: Interviews and focus groups were used to explore the views of pharmacists, pharmacy staff, general practitioners (GPs), members of pharmacy organisations and commissioners. The questioning schedule was developed using the Theoretical Domains Framework which helped inform recommendations to facilitate AMS in community pharmacy.

Results: 8 GPs, 28 pharmacists, 13 pharmacy staff, 6 representatives from pharmacy organisations in England and Wales, and 2 local stakeholders participated. Knowledge and skills both facilitated or hindered provision of self-care and compliance advice by different grades of pharmacy staff. Some staff were not aware of the impact of giving self-care and compliance advice to help control antimicrobial resistance (AMR). The pharmacy environment created barriers to AMS; this included lack of time of well-qualified staff leading to misinformation from underskilled staff to patients about the need for antibiotics or the need to visit the GP, this was exacerbated by lack of space. AMS activities were limited by absent diagnoses on antibiotic prescriptions. Several pharmacy staff felt that undertaking patient examinations, questioning the rationale for antibiotic prescriptions and performing audits would allow them to provide more tailored AMS advice.

Conclusions: Interventions are required to overcome a lack of qualified staff, time and space to give patients AMS advice. Staff need to understand how self-care and antibiotic compliance advice can help control AMR. A multifaceted educational intervention including information for staff with feedback about the advice given may help. Indication for a prescription would enable pharmacists to provide more targeted antibiotic advice. Commissioners should consider the pharmacists? role in examining patients, and giving advice about antibiotic prescriptions.

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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 23 November 2018
e-pub ahead of print date: 28 December 2018
Published date: December 2018

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 436103
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/436103
ISSN: 2044-6055
PURE UUID: 2ab7675e-2cd5-40e4-bbb0-729a8908d928
ORCID for Nick A. Francis: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-8939-7312

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Date deposited: 27 Nov 2019 17:30
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 03:58

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Contributors

Author: Leah Ffion Jones
Author: Rebecca Owens
Author: Anna Sallis
Author: Diane Ashiru-Oredope
Author: Tracey Thornley
Author: Nick A. Francis ORCID iD
Author: Chris Butler
Author: Cliodna A.M. McNulty

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