Staff and users experiences of pharmacy-based sexual and reproductive health services: a qualitative interview study from the UK
Staff and users experiences of pharmacy-based sexual and reproductive health services: a qualitative interview study from the UK
Since August 2015, a large range of sexual health and reproductive health services have been provided in more than 120 pharmacies across Birmingham (England). Our study aimed to explore how pharmacy staff and pharmacy users experience delivering or being provided with sexual health and reproductive health services. Between March and September 2019, semi-structured interviews were conducted with 15 pharmacy staff delivering sexual and reproductive health services and 15 people who had used a sexual and reproductive health service at the pharmacy. Interviews were analysed thematically. Pharmacy users found services convenient to use and were largely satisfied with pharmacy staff consultation skills. Staff were motivated to deliver the services, although some felt that they did not receive sufficient recognition for their work. Barriers to pharmacy-based sexual and reproductive health services were identified, including lack of privacy for users, lack of staff and user awareness of the services, lack of trained staff to deliver services and lack of capacity for copper coil insertions in females presenting for emergency contraception. The identification of barriers to effective service provision can be used to improve the delivery of sexual and reproductive health services in pharmacies and lead to a greater uptake.
Gauly, Julia
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Ross, Jonathan
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Parsons, Joanne
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Atherton, Helen
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3 November 2020
Gauly, Julia
94bbd3d2-6daf-420d-8ca2-80d57d7cf857
Ross, Jonathan
90459779-9860-40a3-9ce7-4efb14ed15ec
Parsons, Joanne
a0ecd433-2fc5-45c1-ab3c-58c1cb28f281
Atherton, Helen
9bb8932e-7bb7-4781-ab97-114613de99b1
Gauly, Julia, Ross, Jonathan, Parsons, Joanne and Atherton, Helen
(2020)
Staff and users experiences of pharmacy-based sexual and reproductive health services: a qualitative interview study from the UK.
Pharmacy, 8 (4), [206].
(doi:10.3390/pharmacy8040206).
Abstract
Since August 2015, a large range of sexual health and reproductive health services have been provided in more than 120 pharmacies across Birmingham (England). Our study aimed to explore how pharmacy staff and pharmacy users experience delivering or being provided with sexual health and reproductive health services. Between March and September 2019, semi-structured interviews were conducted with 15 pharmacy staff delivering sexual and reproductive health services and 15 people who had used a sexual and reproductive health service at the pharmacy. Interviews were analysed thematically. Pharmacy users found services convenient to use and were largely satisfied with pharmacy staff consultation skills. Staff were motivated to deliver the services, although some felt that they did not receive sufficient recognition for their work. Barriers to pharmacy-based sexual and reproductive health services were identified, including lack of privacy for users, lack of staff and user awareness of the services, lack of trained staff to deliver services and lack of capacity for copper coil insertions in females presenting for emergency contraception. The identification of barriers to effective service provision can be used to improve the delivery of sexual and reproductive health services in pharmacies and lead to a greater uptake.
Text
pharmacy-08-00206-v2
- Version of Record
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Accepted/In Press date: 30 October 2020
Published date: 3 November 2020
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 487290
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/487290
ISSN: 2226-4787
PURE UUID: e0d70165-d672-4a9d-a214-7663b6659a8b
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Date deposited: 16 Feb 2024 17:17
Last modified: 18 Mar 2024 04:18
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Contributors
Author:
Julia Gauly
Author:
Jonathan Ross
Author:
Joanne Parsons
Author:
Helen Atherton
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