Pharmacy Travel Health Services in Canada: Experience of Early Adopters
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Methods
- Identify the challenges you experienced providing travel health services. For this participants were asked to select from four potential challenges they had faced introducing their service, with a free text box to describe these challenges or any other that had been encountered
- Can you provide examples where offering this service increased awareness of the benefits of pharmacy-based travel services?
- Can you provide examples where offering this service increased convenience for the traveller?
3. Results
Current scope does not allow for schedule 1 injections such as yellow fever, Japanese encephalitis, and rabies. I am told this will be remedied by our college in the future.(Pharmacist 1, Nova Scotia)
3.1. Challenges to The Service
At the moment it is owner operated so appointments are scheduled during non-dispensing hours. It would be challenging for a staff pharmacist to run without more resources(Pharmacist 1, Nova Scotia)
When i have to write the rx, type them, fill them, check them it takes time in the middle of the consult leaving the patient to twiddle their thumbs for 15–20 min(Pharmacist 1, New Brunswick)
Patients are accustomed to contacting their pharmacists and getting an answer quickly... expectation that it is the same with travel consult... By the way I am going to Nicaragua, and expecting an answer now.(Pharmacist 1 Ontario)
Increased competition, even from pharmacies with no ISTM-certified staff; other responsibilities of store ownership(Pharmacist 1, Alberta)
Vaccine backorders, prescribers insisting patients go to a “real” travel clinic(Province not stated)
Patients feel professional fees are unreasonable and refuse to pay, since they feel they can see their doctor and receive vaccinations and services for free.(Province not stated)
The ease in getting vaccination histories could be dramatically improved if travel health Pharmacists would be allowed to access MIMS etc.(Pharmacist 1, Manitoba)
3.2. Convenience of The Service
3.2.1. A One Stop Shop
Assessment, Prescription, Dispensing and Administration at one spot(Pharmacist 2, Alberta)
Travellers can get most of their travel health needs attended to in a one-stop shop, with the exception of requiring a physician’s Rx for antimalarials and antibiotics, etc. All vaccines can be prescribed and administered by the pharmacist, and travel health kits sold with OTC items.(Pharmacist 1, British Columbia)
We offer a 1-stop travel assessment where patients can have the assessment done, have appropriate meds prescribed, have prescriptions filled, have vaccines administered, and be counseled on travel meds in 1 single visit. Since our pharmacists are authorized to prescribe, we do not have to wait to hear back from their family prescriber to approve our recommendations.(Pharmacist 3, Alberta)
3.2.2. Convenience of Appointments
Quicker and more convenient access to appointments has been a huge opportunity for my patients. I can book Monday to Sunday at almost any time and generally can meet people for next day up to 2 weeks later(Pharmacist 2, Manitoba)
Over the past 6 months, probably 30%-40% of my consultations would be considered short notice that probably was the only way the traveler would have been seen. i.e., by a Pharmacist such as myself offering the convenience.(Pharmacist 1, Manitoba)
Evening appointments, allow patients to follow up by email if they have further questions
Adjudicating insurance on the spot is helpful for patients. More accessible hours than many travel clinics.(Pharmacist 2, British Columbia)
We can usually see patients within a couple of days. In BC we do not have prescriptive authority so have to wait to have family physician sign off on medications required but can do vaccines and consult in one visit(Pharmacist 3, British Columbia)
As we cannot prescribe, the patient still must either meet with the doctor OR wait for the doctor to respond to (and accept) our recommendations. However, the ability to dispense and inject vaccines in one visit to the pharmacy saves the patient a return trip to the doctor for injections. Additionally patients are made to wait at the doctor’s office for vaccinations, we can usually fit patients in right away. Patients can pick up all OTC needs in the same pharmacy visit as well.(Pharmacist 2, Ontario)
3.2.3. Paying through an Insurance Plan
One stop service is highly convenient for the customer Ability to direct bill plan(Pharmacist 4, Alberta)
Being able to bill their insurance plan has alsobeen a benefit for the patients.(Pharmacist 2, Manitoba)
Pharmacists can bill insurance plans vs travel clinics generally do not.(Pharmacist 1, New Brunswick)
3.2.4. Clinical Benefits
Pharmacist can administer injections and prescribe and provide travel meds at the same visit. Also, pharmacist will assess interactions with current med list. Taking interactions and allergies in consideration, the right meds will be prescribed(Pharmacist 5, Alberta)
Easier for a customer to consult his/her pharmacist as the pharmacist knows his medical conditions, med list and can administer his injections and provide travel meds right after the consult(Pharmacist 5, Alberta)
I have had several patients return to me after receiving a travel consultation to get their flu shot, prescribe for a minor ailment or perform a different assessment (e.g., smoking cessation)(Pharmacist 3, Alberta)
3.3. Raising Awareness
3.3.1. Passive
We get a lot of returning customers, and a lot of word-of-mouth referrals(Pharmacist 1, Prince Edward Island)
We have had some success with word-of-mouth between returning customers and also with family physicians in the area(Pharmacist 2, Ontario)
Collaboration with Family Dr, Business cards given out incommunity to market the service(Pharmacist 1, New Brunswick)
I have received many referrals from travelers that I have provided consultations to in the past as well as from physicians that I have personally consulted as well.(Pharmacist 1 Manitoba)
In January 2018, our health unit is no longer offering the travel health services. Therefor the health unit is referring travelers to some of the pharmacy in our community.(Pharmacist 1, Ontario)
3.3.2. Proactive Marketing
Many regular customers travel frequently, and because our pharmacy has only been offering travel consultation for about a year, we are starting to market this when we pick up on certain flags—i.e., customer asks for early fills for travel, customer looking at brochures on travel health, OTC questions, and direct requests for vaccine advice. Many customers now aware that we offer this and referrals to their neighbours and friends is starting.(Pharmacist 1, British Columbia)
Created brochures and posters to display travel services offered, sent them to local travel agents and doctors and hung them in pharmacy(Pharmacist 3, Ontario)
I’ve been invited to present about travel health to a community travel group, which increased their awareness of both potential health risks, as well as how to access pre travel advise. It has increased my colleague’s awareness of being able to provide this service, which has improved access. My staff talk about it more with customers, improving access. I’ve also been invited by the school of pharmacy to give a lecture on travel infections.(Pharmacist 2, Manitoba)
We have done a lunch and learn at our local medical office which our physicians found informative and have had referrals from them.(Pharmacist 3, British Columbia)
4. Discussion
5. Limitations
6. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Question | N (%) |
---|---|
Province/Jurisdiction | |
British Columbia | 3 (14) |
Alberta | 5 (24) |
Manitoba | 2 (10) |
Ontario | 4 (19) |
New Brunswick | 1 (5) |
Nova Scotia | 1 (5) |
Prince Edward Island | 1 (5) |
Not stated | 4 (19) |
Consultations per week | |
<1 | 7 (33) |
1–2 | 1 (5) |
3–4 | 5 (24) |
5–6 | 2 (10) |
7–8 | 1 (5) |
>8 | 2 (10) |
Not stated | 3 (14) |
Challenge | N (%) |
---|---|
Lack of prescribing authority | 11 (52) |
Integration into busy pharmacy | 13 (62) |
Access to public health vaccines * | 11 (52) |
Maintaining competence | 4 (19) |
None stated | 2 (10) |
© 2019 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
Share and Cite
Thidrickson, D.; Goodyer, L. Pharmacy Travel Health Services in Canada: Experience of Early Adopters. Pharmacy 2019, 7, 42. https://doi.org/10.3390/pharmacy7020042
Thidrickson D, Goodyer L. Pharmacy Travel Health Services in Canada: Experience of Early Adopters. Pharmacy. 2019; 7(2):42. https://doi.org/10.3390/pharmacy7020042
Chicago/Turabian StyleThidrickson, Doug, and Larry Goodyer. 2019. "Pharmacy Travel Health Services in Canada: Experience of Early Adopters" Pharmacy 7, no. 2: 42. https://doi.org/10.3390/pharmacy7020042
APA StyleThidrickson, D., & Goodyer, L. (2019). Pharmacy Travel Health Services in Canada: Experience of Early Adopters. Pharmacy, 7(2), 42. https://doi.org/10.3390/pharmacy7020042