A Qualitative Exploration to Understand Access to Pharmacy Medication Reviews: Views from Marginalized Patient Groups
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Patient Sampling, Recruitment and Data Collection
2.2. Data Coding and Analysis
2.3. Theoretical Framework
2.4. Reflexivity
2.5. Co-Produced Digital (E-Learning Resource)
2.6. Ethics Approval
3. Results
Understanding Access
“I’ll tell you that I’m not a good patient, so I’m a service avoider where possible, you have to drag me to the GP. I’m also not very good at taking things, I’m trying to get a lot better at that, and that relates partly to my mental health, my liberty distress, I almost see it as a subtle form of self-harming that I neglect my medications.”(No-MUR P8)
“I don’t want to bother anybody. It’s important because I have asylum status. I think it’s not right to ask for medicines again and again. I don’t feel I deserve that level or quality of medicine that other people might, all because of my asylum status hindering me.”(No-MUR P9)
“We got all our information from the parents, aunty and uncle obviously, and we get all the information from them. But they receive it from where they need to receive it, and they tell us how to administer it … You see they don’t tell us of any changes because of confidentiality, but mum knows everything that she needs to know,”(No-MUR P7)
“Well I felt quite surprised felt ok about it ... that she actually did that, I thought you always had that chat with the doctor and thought the pharmacist was there to just sort out your medication.”(MUR P4)
“If someone came and asked that of you, you’d be like “why?”, you’d be questioning it “Why have they come to me and asked me that?”. It makes you suspicious to engage with them.”(MUR P1)
“Never, and I have visited different pharmacies. Never, they’ve never asked me. [Have you ever seen any posters or leaflets?] There might be but I haven’t seen any of them. Maybe next time I will go and ask them if I’m eligible for this service. But no, no, I’ve never seen this.”(No-MUR 1)
“I think they’re trying to explain something to me, but I just don’t understand them. I can’t communicate. And, they don’t really take you into a private one-to-one room … I think they assume I know how to take it and hand it over to me.”(No MUR P4)
“I would be scared to talk about gender issues because I would be worried about experiencing transphobia especially to older pharmacists or places where they have older work force. I would be worried about them talking behind my back. If I was collecting a prescription, I wouldn’t be that comfortable, particularly in the pharmacy and the place that I grew up, it was a very old population. They didn’t have much respect for privacy, they would often shout what medications people were on that made me feel very uncomfortable collecting medication to do with transitioning.”(MUR P6)
“I must tell you when someone rings me up, I can only communicate from the bedroom. I get 3 or 4 rings, and by the time I get to the phone the rings stop, and they don’t leave me their number for me to get back to them … sometimes I’m just coming through the door and the phone goes off. It just drives me crazy! And gets me out of bed, I must climb out, get to the phone, it stops ringing and I’m out of breath as well!”(No MUR P6)
“The categories of people that you mentioned, refugees, people with mental health etc, they lack confidence. There’re communication problems. However, I think the way is for a relative to be involved that has confidence; through an advocate, that’s quite important. Especially with people with mental health problems because I could advocate for my sister since I know her history, and I would be more aware of the side effects, that’s important. But the client themselves they lack capacity really to ask for a review or to understand what their needs are.”(No MUR P2)
“Yes, she did and told me I need to keep my blue inhaler with me at all times as I sounded chesty and wheezy and I have COPD. [Prior to that did you not keep your inhaler with you?] No but will do now.”(MUR P2)
“Not put me on loads of tablets. I am coping good it’s just that I don’t want to be on loads of tablets it’s not good some of them are full of crap and there is a lot of side effects.”(MUR P8)
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A. Abridged patient topic guide
- Background
- Explore health status, medical conditions and current concerns about health
- Investigate experiences of health care system
- Explore concerns or problems with medications
- Explore adherence i.e., are medicine taken as prescribed or have these been changed? Miss doses, if so when/why?
- Explore understanding of what medicines are for, concerns about side effects, perceptions of effectiveness, reluctance to take etc.
- Relationship with pharmacy/pharmacist
- Experiences with pharmacies and support staff
- Explore obstacles to access
- Have patients been offered a pharmacy consultation, if so explore context
- Patient awareness of available pharmacy support and MUR service
- Feelings about being approached for support services i.e., MURs
- Specific questions relating to belonging to an under-served community
- Explore communication/cultural challenges
- Difficulties experienced by those with disability (People with disability)
- Reluctance to seek healthcare advice
- Participants’ views on how MURs can be better tailored to people who are medically under-served
- Final comments/thoughts
Appendix B. Abridged patient topic guide (for those who received an MUR)
- Background & circumstance
- Explore health status, medical conditions and current concerns about health
- Use of health services & medicine use
- Do you have any concerns or problems with the medicines currently prescribed?
- Relationship with pharmacy/pharmacist
- What has your experience with pharmacies & their staff been (friendly, unfriendly, informative, discriminative etc.)?
- Access
- Have you ever been offered a pharmacy consultation when you visit pharmacies? And what was your experience?
- What sort of support are you aware of being available from your pharmacist? Can you recall any specific advice given by the pharmacist?
- Have you ever asked a pharmacist for advice about your medicines (details)? Do you think the pharmacist is someone that you could approach for advice about your medicines? What prevents you from asking at the pharmacy?
- If you have problems with your medication what if anything do you intend to do about it? What would you like to do?
- How would you feel about being approached about using one or more of these additional services?
- Specific questions relating to access and marginalized status
- Explore self-identification/belonging to a medically under-served group
- Explore communication/cultural challenges (people who have English as second language or from BAME community)
- Can you describe the difficulties that your disability has in accessing or being offered community pharmacy services? (People with disability)
- How do you think medicines services like the MUR can be better tailored to others in the same circumstances as you?
- Questions about their experience of the MUR
- Explore awareness of the MUR and expectation of the service?
- Can you describe how you felt during the consultation? (Prompt—Friendly, comfortable, nervous?)
- Explore patient’s perceived purpose of the MUR: What do you think the purpose of this service was?
- What did you find most helpful & what did you find least helpful?
- In what ways, if any, has the MUR helped you with your medicines? Have you changed the way you take your medicine according to this advice?
- Are there any outstanding problems with your new medicine or any other medicine that you would like to have discussed with the pharmacist during the consultation?
- Do you think the MUR was necessary for you?
- Would you recommend this service to others?
- Would you like to see any improvement in the way MURs are carried out?
- Any final comments/thank the patient
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Participant ID | Received an MUR | Age (years) | Gender Presentation | Marginalized Group Status |
---|---|---|---|---|
No-MUR P1 | No | 40 | Male | BAME |
No-MUR P2 | No | 57 | Male | BAME |
No-MUR P3 | No | Not given | Female | Disability (Deaf)/Carer |
No-MUR P4 | No | Not given | Female | Disability (Deaf) |
No-MUR P5 | No | 60 | Female | BAME |
No-MUR P6 | No | 67 | Female | Homebound (physical disability) |
No-MUR P7 | No | 28 | Male | Homebound (Neurodegenerative disorder) |
No-MUR P8 | No | Not given | Male | Homebound (Neurodegenerative disorder) |
No-MUR P9 | No | 66 | Female | Multiple morbidities (Previous homelessness/domestic violence) |
No-MUR P10 | No | Not given | Male | Asylum and physical disability |
MUR P1 | Yes | 44 | Male | Mental Health and drug user |
MUR P2 | Yes | 39 | Female | Mental health illness |
MUR P3 | Yes | 67 | Male | Multiple morbidities |
MUR P4 | Yes | 52 | Female | Mental health illness/multiple morbidities |
MUR P5 | Yes | 58 | Female | Disability (Blind)/Homebound |
MUR P6 | Yes | 22 | Male | LGBTQ * (undertaking gender transition) |
MUR P7 | Yes | 42 | Female | Neurodegenerative disorder/previous drug use |
MUR P8 | Yes | 19 | Male | Stigmatized health condition (epilepsy/ADHD **) |
MUR P9 | Yes | 55 | Male | BAME |
MUR P10 | Yes | 42 | Female | BAME |
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Share and Cite
Latif, A.; Mandane, B.; Ali, A.; Ghumra, S.; Gulzar, N. A Qualitative Exploration to Understand Access to Pharmacy Medication Reviews: Views from Marginalized Patient Groups. Pharmacy 2020, 8, 73. https://doi.org/10.3390/pharmacy8020073
Latif A, Mandane B, Ali A, Ghumra S, Gulzar N. A Qualitative Exploration to Understand Access to Pharmacy Medication Reviews: Views from Marginalized Patient Groups. Pharmacy. 2020; 8(2):73. https://doi.org/10.3390/pharmacy8020073
Chicago/Turabian StyleLatif, Asam, Baguiasri Mandane, Abid Ali, Sabina Ghumra, and Nargis Gulzar. 2020. "A Qualitative Exploration to Understand Access to Pharmacy Medication Reviews: Views from Marginalized Patient Groups" Pharmacy 8, no. 2: 73. https://doi.org/10.3390/pharmacy8020073
APA StyleLatif, A., Mandane, B., Ali, A., Ghumra, S., & Gulzar, N. (2020). A Qualitative Exploration to Understand Access to Pharmacy Medication Reviews: Views from Marginalized Patient Groups. Pharmacy, 8(2), 73. https://doi.org/10.3390/pharmacy8020073