How can community pharmacists be supported to manage skin conditions? A multistage stakeholder research prioritisation exercise
How can community pharmacists be supported to manage skin conditions? A multistage stakeholder research prioritisation exercise
Objective: to establish research priorities which will support the development and delivery of community pharmacy initiatives for the management of skin conditions.
Design: an iterative, multistage stakeholder consultation consisting of online survey, participant workshops and prioritisation meeting.
Setting: all data collection took place online with participants completing a survey (delivered via the JISC Online Survey platform, between July 2021 and January 2022) and participating in online workshops and meetings (hosted on Microsoft Teams between April and July 2022).
Participants: 174 community pharmacists and pharmacy staff completed the online survey. 53 participants participated in the exploratory workshops (19 community pharmacists, 4 non-pharmacist members of pharmacy staff and 30 members of the public). 4 healthcare professionals who were unable to attend a workshop participated in a one-to-one interview. 29 participants from the workshops took part in the prioritisation meeting (5 pharmacists/pharmacy staff, 1 other healthcare professional and 23 members of the public).
Results: five broad areas of potential research need were identified in the online survey: (1) identifying and diagnosing skin conditions; (2) skin conditions in skin of colour; (3) when to refer skin conditions; (4) disease-specific concerns and (5) product-specific concerns. These were explored and refined in the workshops to establish 10 potential areas for research, which will support pharmacists in managing skin conditions. These were ranked in the prioritisation meeting. Among those prioritised were topics which consider how pharmacists work with other healthcare professionals to identify and manage skin conditions.
Conclusions: survey responses and stakeholder workshops all recognised the potential for community pharmacists to play an active role in the management of common skin conditions. Future research may support this in the generation of resources for pharmacists, in encouraging public take-up of pharmacy services, and in evaluating the most effective provision for dealing with skin conditions.
DERMATOLOGY, PRIMARY CARE, Patient Participation, QUALITATIVE RESEARCH
Harvey, Jane
e9702605-cded-4f68-a013-635428427c10
Shariff, Zakia
e3b0a22e-b8e3-4b16-ba2f-3f46cbe3cac0
Anderson, Claire
a520e99a-288b-4309-ad30-4ea845be1397
Santer, Miriam
3ce7e832-31eb-4d27-9876-3a1cd7f381dc
Thomas, Kim Suzanne
8c6a245a-af7a-4d25-8a16-ad9d5ab1cc72
Maidment, Ian
391e074b-4ac6-49f6-b032-d32e93119527
Leighton, Paul
ab276b64-0002-46cb-a729-88052d462c72
2 January 2024
Harvey, Jane
e9702605-cded-4f68-a013-635428427c10
Shariff, Zakia
e3b0a22e-b8e3-4b16-ba2f-3f46cbe3cac0
Anderson, Claire
a520e99a-288b-4309-ad30-4ea845be1397
Santer, Miriam
3ce7e832-31eb-4d27-9876-3a1cd7f381dc
Thomas, Kim Suzanne
8c6a245a-af7a-4d25-8a16-ad9d5ab1cc72
Maidment, Ian
391e074b-4ac6-49f6-b032-d32e93119527
Leighton, Paul
ab276b64-0002-46cb-a729-88052d462c72
Harvey, Jane, Shariff, Zakia, Anderson, Claire, Boyd, Matthew J., Santer, Miriam, Thomas, Kim Suzanne, Maidment, Ian and Leighton, Paul
(2024)
How can community pharmacists be supported to manage skin conditions? A multistage stakeholder research prioritisation exercise.
BMJ Open, 14 (1), [e071863].
(doi:10.1136/bmjopen-2023-071863).
Abstract
Objective: to establish research priorities which will support the development and delivery of community pharmacy initiatives for the management of skin conditions.
Design: an iterative, multistage stakeholder consultation consisting of online survey, participant workshops and prioritisation meeting.
Setting: all data collection took place online with participants completing a survey (delivered via the JISC Online Survey platform, between July 2021 and January 2022) and participating in online workshops and meetings (hosted on Microsoft Teams between April and July 2022).
Participants: 174 community pharmacists and pharmacy staff completed the online survey. 53 participants participated in the exploratory workshops (19 community pharmacists, 4 non-pharmacist members of pharmacy staff and 30 members of the public). 4 healthcare professionals who were unable to attend a workshop participated in a one-to-one interview. 29 participants from the workshops took part in the prioritisation meeting (5 pharmacists/pharmacy staff, 1 other healthcare professional and 23 members of the public).
Results: five broad areas of potential research need were identified in the online survey: (1) identifying and diagnosing skin conditions; (2) skin conditions in skin of colour; (3) when to refer skin conditions; (4) disease-specific concerns and (5) product-specific concerns. These were explored and refined in the workshops to establish 10 potential areas for research, which will support pharmacists in managing skin conditions. These were ranked in the prioritisation meeting. Among those prioritised were topics which consider how pharmacists work with other healthcare professionals to identify and manage skin conditions.
Conclusions: survey responses and stakeholder workshops all recognised the potential for community pharmacists to play an active role in the management of common skin conditions. Future research may support this in the generation of resources for pharmacists, in encouraging public take-up of pharmacy services, and in evaluating the most effective provision for dealing with skin conditions.
Text
e071863.full
- Version of Record
More information
Accepted/In Press date: 16 November 2023
Published date: 2 January 2024
Keywords:
DERMATOLOGY, PRIMARY CARE, Patient Participation, QUALITATIVE RESEARCH
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 496969
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/496969
ISSN: 2044-6055
PURE UUID: 3b165888-f7e4-44bc-9118-0717695c35d2
Catalogue record
Date deposited: 08 Jan 2025 15:40
Last modified: 10 Jan 2025 02:47
Export record
Altmetrics
Contributors
Author:
Jane Harvey
Author:
Zakia Shariff
Author:
Claire Anderson
Author:
Matthew J. Boyd
Author:
Kim Suzanne Thomas
Author:
Ian Maidment
Author:
Paul Leighton
Download statistics
Downloads from ePrints over the past year. Other digital versions may also be available to download e.g. from the publisher's website.
View more statistics