Australian Community Pharmacy Harm-Minimisation Services: Scope for Service Expansion to Improve Healthcare Access
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Study Population
2.2. Data Collection
2.3. Data Analysis
3. Results
3.1. Scope and Provision of Pharmacy-Based Harm Minimisation Services
“They just wanta, put it [sharps kit] in a bag and get you out the door really [laughs].”(C5, Male)
“…most of the customers they usually come in and they will have a low voice, can I please have a sharps kit and then they want to get it and then go…They don’t want to listen…it’s pretty hard for the front shop people or the pharmacist to even intervene with that.”(IP1, Male, Pharmacy 1)
“…the kits don’t even have water in them and you’re trying to get them to buy water…We sell 100 kits a week but we might sell ten waters…so, I can’t even imagine then wanting to talk to them about, you know anything else, brochures and stuff.”(P4, Female, Pharmacy 3)
“…Never been asked so it’s probably just something that we wouldn’t necessarily ever need”(P9, Female, Pharmacy 6)
“…talk to them about hep [hepatitis] C treatment, talk to them about whether they’ve had a test, do they know their status?… If they haven’t been treated maybe try and direct them to a local GP [general practitioner] who is prepared to prescribe. Or even talk to their prescribing GP and ask them why they haven’t considered treating them.”(S5, Male)
“…we say, ‘oh, here’s nicotine patches, here’s things you can do’. We never just say—‘oh, go stop smoking’…and that’s like a legal addiction. Like, and how much more addictive are these illegal addictions, so how much more so do they need like a way to manage tapering off and coming off it?”(P6, Male, Pharmacy 4)
“…providing things like sharps kits prevents us from being a target for hold-ups and thefts and robberies…the theory is that people don’t shit in their own nest…”(P5, Male, Pharmacy 3)
3.2. The Complexity of Service Provision
“…I find it difficult. I don’t like confrontation. especially ’cause a lot of them are dependent on it, and they say ‘I need it for sleep…I’m not addicted’…if I am concerned, I try and contact a doctor if possible but again, they’re hard to contact sometimes as well.”(IP2, Female, Pharmacy 5)
“…people tell their doctor or tell their treatment provider that they’re using substances, and instead of you know, I don’t know—dealing with that in a better way, they get reduced off the program and so that increases harms by people, you know, need to use or return to drug use…”(S1, Female)
“Because I feel like they’d look at me and think you’ve got mental health problems because you use drugs. Whereas it’s the other way round, I’ve got mental health problems so I use drugs. Probably doesn’t make it any better, but, that’s that…”(C3, Female)
“…there was a fear around that if he was scripted naloxone from the same pharmacy that he was getting his S8 [Schedule 8, controlled drug] medication from-that they would, I guess—cause a barrier for him in getting that medication.”(S3, Female)
“…don’t seem to have that level of support from the private doctors, it’s pretty much ‘oh no I’ve written his script this month and I don’t want to see him for another month and I don’t care what he’s doing’…”(P2, Male, Pharmacy 1)
“…we charge like $7 per day or $5 a day if they want to pay for a week…maybe like $2 per day would be more reasonable. Like just thinking about myself having to pay for that, that’s expensive.”(P3, Female, Pharmacy 2)
“…I’ve got one guy this morning and he’s on six medications. They’re all staged supplies and they’re all on different days and he requests an early supply all the time for all of them. And he’s a general patient and he doesn’t have the money to pay for his pickup, so the amount of time we spend on this particular patient-phenomenal…”(P4, Female, Pharmacy 3)
3.3. Person-Centred Advice and Support
“…you ask for a Fitpack [sharps kit] and they go ‘oh, one Fitpack’s $10′ like really loud and there’s other people in there and, you know they look at you to see if you look wasted or not…”(C5, Male)
“…I just look at them and then go and get their dose. Do you know what I mean? Whereas everybody else who comes in, you’ll say ‘good morning.’”(P1, Female, Pharmacy 1)
“…they were like opening up about their lives and how sad they are and how one thing after another has led to them just being trapped in their addiction, and you always kind of know that that’s what happens, but you never really hear people really open up about it”(P3, Female, Pharmacy 2)
“I think some staff that we have would be on the conservative side to think that we shouldn’t be welcoming that type of patient into the pharmacy. My answer to that would be what type of patient do you refer to? We have all ranges of different patients that use this service and they shouldn’t be discriminated against just because they need the service”.(P8, Male, Pharmacy 5)
“Some pharmacies’ dosing points are much more consumer-friendly than others…I know one or two pharmacies where the clients feel stigmatised by where they have to dose, the way they’re treated when they’re being dosed. You know, they’re kind of like put to the end of the line sort of thing and they’re in public and so it’s not ideal...”(S4, Male)
“…some [OTP] patients really like, like the privacy over there, but some patients feel a bit like they’re being treated like a druggo or like they’re a dangerous person… ”(P3, Female, Pharmacy 2)
“…You know, [staff] that aren’t going to tell you to stop using, you know. We can’t help you unless you make changes to your drug use or we can’t help you unless you do this.”(S1, Female)
“…if a pharmacy asked me about my sleep—because I’m basically an insomniac (laugh)—um, yeah I’d be willing to say ‘yes I do, I’ve got serious issues,’ but I wouldn’t go down there specifically to say ‘look I’ve got this sleeping issue’…if somebody came up to me and said ‘you look really, really tired, is there something that we can help you out with?’ yeah I think I’d be more willing to open up.”(C4, Male)
4. Discussion
Limitations
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Main Focus | Interviewer Questions |
---|---|
Background | Briefly outline your current position and what this involves. Does your organisation provide any direct services/support for consumers with addiction/s? Please explain. |
Harm minimisation: concept and related services | What does the term harm minimisation mean to you? What is your/organisation’s perspective on harm minimisation services? What services do you/organisation believe are part of an approach to harm minimisation in the community? Why? |
Role of community pharmacy | What is your/organisation’s perspective on the services located within the community pharmacy? How could community pharmacy help consumers with addiction (as part of a public health role)? Why? What pharmacy services are related to harm minimisation? Describe the services your community pharmacy provides for patients/caregivers with an addiction. Do you promote harm minimisation services in the pharmacy setting? What are the benefits of providing harm minimisation services in community pharmacies? What are the risks? Barriers? What can community pharmacy staff do to better support you [consumer] in relation to your lifestyle choices? Do you [consumer] go to the community pharmacy for other health-related services/has this ever been offered to you? What influences your [consumer] choice of pharmacy? What do you perceive to be your role [pharmacist/assistant] in relation to harm minimisation? |
Pharmacy experiences | What do your members think about community pharmacy and the services they provide?Why? Have any customers/clients enquired about a service that could be potentially offered within a pharmacy? Describe your experiences accessing a harm minimisation service within community pharmacy (including privacy). What information have you ever received from a pharmacy in relation to harm minimisation? Can you tell me about your experiences with consumers with addictions in the pharmacy? If you could change anything about the interaction/s you have had with pharmacy staff, what would this be and why? Describe what your ideal community pharmacy service would look like for consumers with an addiction/s? Can you tell me about your experiences with consumers with addictions in the pharmacy? Have you identified any differences in the services provided for consumers/caregivers with an addiction/s as compared to physical illness? To other mental illnesses? |
Managing addiction | Do you use a needle and syringe service? Where do you access this service? Why? How would you describe your confidence in your ability to speak with your consumers about addiction concerns? What is the typical plan of action when you encounter a patient you perceive to be addicted to medicines? Think of a time when you should have engaged a patient in a conversation about addiction but chose not to do so/did so. Please describe the situation. Describe the healthcare team members you work with in providing your services to consumers/carers with an addiction/s. |
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McMillan, S.S.; Chan, H.; Hattingh, L.H. Australian Community Pharmacy Harm-Minimisation Services: Scope for Service Expansion to Improve Healthcare Access. Pharmacy 2021, 9, 95. https://doi.org/10.3390/pharmacy9020095
McMillan SS, Chan H, Hattingh LH. Australian Community Pharmacy Harm-Minimisation Services: Scope for Service Expansion to Improve Healthcare Access. Pharmacy. 2021; 9(2):95. https://doi.org/10.3390/pharmacy9020095
Chicago/Turabian StyleMcMillan, Sara S., Hidy Chan, and Laetitia H. Hattingh. 2021. "Australian Community Pharmacy Harm-Minimisation Services: Scope for Service Expansion to Improve Healthcare Access" Pharmacy 9, no. 2: 95. https://doi.org/10.3390/pharmacy9020095
APA StyleMcMillan, S. S., Chan, H., & Hattingh, L. H. (2021). Australian Community Pharmacy Harm-Minimisation Services: Scope for Service Expansion to Improve Healthcare Access. Pharmacy, 9(2), 95. https://doi.org/10.3390/pharmacy9020095