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Uptake and user characteristics for pharmacy-based contraception and chlamydia treatment: a quantitative retrospective study from the UK

Uptake and user characteristics for pharmacy-based contraception and chlamydia treatment: a quantitative retrospective study from the UK
Uptake and user characteristics for pharmacy-based contraception and chlamydia treatment: a quantitative retrospective study from the UK
The health provider Umbrella delivers several SRHS through more than 120 pharmacies in Birmingham (England). Umbrella pharmacy data collected between August 2015 and August 2018 were used to descriptively analyse the uptake and user characteristics for emergency contraception, short-acting oral contraception, condoms and chlamydia treatment. In total, 54,309 pharmacy visits were analysed. A total of 30,473 females presented for emergency contraception. Most were supplied with an emergency contraceptive pill (98.6%, 30,052 out of 30,473), which was levonorgestrel in 57.4% of cases (17,255 out of 30,052). Of those females who attended for short-acting oral contraception, 54.3% (1764 out of 3247) were provided with the progesterone-only pill. Of those who were given chlamydia treatment, the majority received doxycycline (76.8%, 454 out of 591). A total of 74% (14,888 out of 19,998) of those who requested condoms were not provided with specific instructions on their use. Pharmacies have the potential to make a substantial contribution to the delivery of an integrated sexual health service including rapid access to emergency contraception, convenient delivery of short-acting hormonal contraception and treatment of chlamydia. Appropriate education, support and audit is required to ensure the delivery of high-quality care.
contraception, chlamydia treatment, sexual health
2226-4787
Gauly, Julia
94bbd3d2-6daf-420d-8ca2-80d57d7cf857
Atherton, Helen
9bb8932e-7bb7-4781-ab97-114613de99b1
Ross, Jonathan D.C.
0319a819-296b-488a-9339-b528078b06e0
Gauly, Julia
94bbd3d2-6daf-420d-8ca2-80d57d7cf857
Atherton, Helen
9bb8932e-7bb7-4781-ab97-114613de99b1
Ross, Jonathan D.C.
0319a819-296b-488a-9339-b528078b06e0

Gauly, Julia, Atherton, Helen and Ross, Jonathan D.C. (2021) Uptake and user characteristics for pharmacy-based contraception and chlamydia treatment: a quantitative retrospective study from the UK. Pharmacy, 9 (1), [61]. (doi:10.3390/pharmacy9010061).

Record type: Article

Abstract

The health provider Umbrella delivers several SRHS through more than 120 pharmacies in Birmingham (England). Umbrella pharmacy data collected between August 2015 and August 2018 were used to descriptively analyse the uptake and user characteristics for emergency contraception, short-acting oral contraception, condoms and chlamydia treatment. In total, 54,309 pharmacy visits were analysed. A total of 30,473 females presented for emergency contraception. Most were supplied with an emergency contraceptive pill (98.6%, 30,052 out of 30,473), which was levonorgestrel in 57.4% of cases (17,255 out of 30,052). Of those females who attended for short-acting oral contraception, 54.3% (1764 out of 3247) were provided with the progesterone-only pill. Of those who were given chlamydia treatment, the majority received doxycycline (76.8%, 454 out of 591). A total of 74% (14,888 out of 19,998) of those who requested condoms were not provided with specific instructions on their use. Pharmacies have the potential to make a substantial contribution to the delivery of an integrated sexual health service including rapid access to emergency contraception, convenient delivery of short-acting hormonal contraception and treatment of chlamydia. Appropriate education, support and audit is required to ensure the delivery of high-quality care.

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Accepted/In Press date: 15 March 2021
Published date: 17 March 2021
Keywords: contraception, chlamydia treatment, sexual health

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 487302
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/487302
ISSN: 2226-4787
PURE UUID: b7bb347e-45ff-48a9-9bf9-1c40dc79c701
ORCID for Helen Atherton: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-7072-1925

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Date deposited: 16 Feb 2024 17:26
Last modified: 18 Mar 2024 04:18

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Contributors

Author: Julia Gauly
Author: Helen Atherton ORCID iD
Author: Jonathan D.C. Ross

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