Role Theory: A Framework to Explore Health Professional Perceptions of Expanding Rural Community Pharmacists’ Role
Abstract
:1. Introduction
Role Theory
2. Data and Methods
2.1. Study Design
2.2. Participants, Setting and Recruitment
2.3. Procedure and Semi-Structured Interview
2.4. Data Analysis
2.5. Ethics Approval
3. Results
“Chronic disease is a huge concern; being isolated from specialists is a huge health concern. We have experienced mental health concerns with drought, floods and purely isolation as well.”(P8—Podiatrist)
“I think it’s a great idea. In rural and remote areas, we don’t have enough skills; we don’t have the people available so I think that any one of us that is a health professional with a little bit of a broadened scope of practice does help out the clients but also the other health professionals within the area.”(P8—Podiatrist)
3.1. Role Ambiguity
“It would be a benefit for services like remote nurses to understand what is in the pharmacy scope of practice and what you can offer. I don’t really know…. I just make ad hoc use of what I can, but I don’t really know what you can actually offer and do.”(P7—Remote Nurse Practitioner)
“Having a chat [with] our local pharmacist about what it is that we do, she was like, ‘Wow, I didn’t realise how broad it was,’ and that’s really important for us to know because, quite often, pharmacists are the front base in terms of medicine and access to healthcare that clients go to, and for her to advocate who she needs to see for whatever it is they are presenting with is important. The pharmacist here seems to have a limited understanding of what the services are.”(P2—Occupational Therapist)
“Pharmacy has sort of sat in that awkward middle ground: Are you medical? Are you with the psychologists that don’t fit either? Are you actually allied health? Where do you fit in allied health? I think you’ve always been sort of floating. Doing the expanded services is either going to drag you more into the medical field with the nurses or more towards allied health. You might get adopted somewhere.”(P3—Physiotherapist)
3.2. Role Conflict
“The other barrier would be the other health professionals in the area: the doctors might be saying ‘You’re taking bread from my table, or you’re not qualified to provide that service and those sorts of issues’, but I think that depends on the services within the town. If the town is strapped for services, anyone with a bit of health knowledge is good…. People are getting dietary advice from their next-door neighbours, and that doesn’t put the dieticians out of business.”(P6—General Practitioner)
“Pharmacists could even change some of the things they have in their shops. They dabble in a bit of Darrell Lea [chocolate] stands, placement of that’s really important if it’s not near the counter. They definitely could influence what people are buying.”(P1—Public Health Nutritionist)
“Sometimes, it’s hard to be the recommender and the provider of a particular treatment…. The conflict of interest would be an interesting thing for pharmacists. But I suppose for pharmacies, people are always coming in saying they want something for something and pharmacists are always recommending things from their shelves.”(P6—General Practitioner)
“I don’t know how long pharmacists are going to expect to do extra training for. It’s certainly not going to be years unless they all change their profession. So, that’s my issue with prescribing, is that we have to know what we’re prescribing for.”(P5—General Practitioner)
“If [pharmacists] are doing the prescribing, whose checking on them to make sure they are getting it right?”(P10—General Practitioner)
“Have a conversation and collaborate, approach it cooperatively and have a partnership particularly with the GPs (general practitioners). We have been good buddies for a long time back. That sort of partnership can work really well.”(P6—General Practitioner)
“‘You’re encroaching!’ might come from the medical side. I know as nurses we do get that from certain avenues if they think that we are stealing their work.”(P19—Registered Nurse)
“There will be things to manage about push back from other disciplines and other areas because people in health do get very protective of their patch.”(P7—Remote Nurse Practitioner/Midwife)
“If they are really worried about it treading on their toes, why aren’t they out in community doing more? Why aren’t they going to the people? What’s their reason for not coming to the people? That’s where the problem is out there. People don’t want to come to them. They don’t want to leave their home. They have to cater for them at some point, you know, go to the communities to work.”(P22—Indigenous Health Worker) (Context: doctor resistance)
3.3. Role Overload
“Can I expect someone to step into that role and be like, ‘Yeah, let’s give this a go,’ when you’re expanding your practice in many different areas at the same time, while you’re trying to learn everything at once? How can you learn everything very well if you’re putting that much pressure on yourself?”(P3—Physiotherapist)
“The pharmacist role is enough by itself without training for expanded practice.”(P5—General Practitioner)
“They burn out and they don’t want to be a pharmacist anymore, and they go back to the city and do something else.”(P15—Occupational Therapist)
3.4. Role Identity
“You would need to be really careful about how you define expanded practice and how you link that to what pharmacy is and what pharmacists do. What it’s all about? What does it mean? Why am I a pharmacist if I am doing what a nurse is doing? Particularly for newer graduates, lack of professional direction, you can diversify so much that you take away from what is core....”(P15—Occupational Therapist)
“It is very pharmacist dependent because it is based on the extra skills that they may not have learnt, so that’s the good thing about remote pharmacists compared to city pharmacists.”(P4—Emergency Retrieval Doctor)
“There should be two sorts of pharmacists: those that are paid a salary, work remote and go by the evidence, and they need to be separated from retail people who have a pharmacy degree and sell rubbish to patients who can’t afford it.”(P4—Emergency Retrieval Doctor)
3.5. Role Insufficiency
“It’s a shame because we are not using pharmacists enough in the role that they have got.”(P13—General Practitioner)
“I don’t think pharmacists can step into that role. If anyone can step into that role, it should be a nurse practitioner.”(P9—General Practitioner)
“Low-level counselling type service is a service gap too. We have plenty of psychologists, but the sort of services that the minister used to provide or the trusted friend used to provide, those sorts of services, would be ok.”(P6—General Practitioner)
“Irrespective of your background, you need to be trained to do that. A doctor wouldn’t do a hearing test unless they were trained to do it, so if they do the same training as everyone else, I would have no problem with pharmacists doing it.”(P4—General Practitioner—Emergency Retrieval)
“It might actually help if they built their structures to actually link in more broadly with the other health services to link and to raise awareness of the role of how the pharmacist can help.”(P7—Remote Nurse Practitioner)
4. Discussion
5. Limitations
6. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
- Introduction—we are interested in hearing about your thoughts about expanded pharmacy services in rural and remote community pharmacies. Expanded pharmacy services are an extension of the recognised scope of the pharmacy profession. It is applied to pharmacists undertaking tasks usually provided by other health professionals, e.g., doctors, nurses and allied health, and is often synonymous and interchanged with the term extended practice.
- Demographics
(1) What is your age in complete years?
_______(2) What is your gender? - ☐
- Male
- ☐
- Female
- ☐
- Other, please specify ____________
(3) What is your home postcode?
______________(4) What is your occupation?
__________________ - In your opinion, what are the major health concerns for your rural community?
- What are your thoughts about rural community pharmacies providing expanded services?
- Is there a need for community pharmacies to provide expanded pharmacy services in your community? Can pharmacies address any gaps in health service delivery?
- Can you describe any expanded pharmacy services that would benefit your community? (interviewer to describe 5–10 expanded services for consideration if none are known)
- What difficulties/barriers do you think might need to be overcome to implement expanded services?
- What aspects/enablers would make expanded pharmacy services successful for your community?
- What are your thoughts on remuneration for pharmacies providing services?
- What impact do you think expanded services might have on health professional–pharmacist relationships?
- Are there any other comments about expanded pharmacy practice you would like to make before we finish?
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Participant Characteristics | Number (%) |
---|---|
Age | |
<25 years | 2 (9%) |
25–45 years | 12 (52%) |
46+ years | 9 (39%) |
Gender | |
Female | 18 (78%) |
Male | 5 (22%) |
Occupation | |
Doctor | 8 (35%) |
Nurse | 4 (17%) |
Allied Health | 11 (48%) |
MMM Categories | |
MM3/4/5—Large/Medium/Large Rural Towns | 5 (21%) |
MM6—Remote Communities | 16 (70%) |
MM7—Very Remote Communities | 2 (9%) |
Role Construct | Definition | Example |
---|---|---|
Role ambiguity | Disagreement on the role expectation associated with a lack of clarity of those expectations | “A lot of the time, we just don’t know who to go to or who to refer to, and that’s both from the health professionals and a pharmacist: just not having a sound understanding of who provides what service.” (P2—Occupational Therapist) |
Role conflict | The focal person perceives existing role expectations as being contradictory or mutually exclusive | “Pharmacists want to sell something to make money, and when they’re going to be providing the diagnostic and other services, then the incentive is going to be overwhelming.” (P5—General Practitioner) |
Role overload | Inadequate resources relative to the possibility of excessive demands | “Time, not having enough time to do all of those things because you are busy doing other things…. You would have to really try and figure out your niche and what you wanted to do or provide, then focus on that level rather than broadening your scope the whole way.” (P8—Integrated Allied Health Manager-Podiatrist) |
Role identity | The individual’s interpretation of role expectation, that is, position-specific norms identifying the attitudes, behaviours and cognitions required and anticipated for a role occupant. | “When you are doing lots of different things, you’re like, ‘Hang on a minute, how does this even relate to you?’… You need to have that capacity to bring it back to some core set of beliefs and structure around your professional identity.” (P15—Occupational Therapist) |
Role insufficiency | Disparity in fulfilling role expectations, obligations or goals as perceived by self or significant others | “I’ve been to the chemist and never have seen the pharmacist. Some girl comes out and just gives you the pills. You know, where’s that comprehensive consult, or discussion about new medication? It’s not there.” (P17—General Practitioner) |
© 2020 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/).
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Taylor, S.; Cairns, A.; Glass, B. Role Theory: A Framework to Explore Health Professional Perceptions of Expanding Rural Community Pharmacists’ Role. Pharmacy 2020, 8, 161. https://doi.org/10.3390/pharmacy8030161
Taylor S, Cairns A, Glass B. Role Theory: A Framework to Explore Health Professional Perceptions of Expanding Rural Community Pharmacists’ Role. Pharmacy. 2020; 8(3):161. https://doi.org/10.3390/pharmacy8030161
Chicago/Turabian StyleTaylor, Selina, Alice Cairns, and Beverley Glass. 2020. "Role Theory: A Framework to Explore Health Professional Perceptions of Expanding Rural Community Pharmacists’ Role" Pharmacy 8, no. 3: 161. https://doi.org/10.3390/pharmacy8030161
APA StyleTaylor, S., Cairns, A., & Glass, B. (2020). Role Theory: A Framework to Explore Health Professional Perceptions of Expanding Rural Community Pharmacists’ Role. Pharmacy, 8(3), 161. https://doi.org/10.3390/pharmacy8030161