Community Health Nurses’ Perspective on the Introduced Rational Drug Use Policy in Primary Care Settings in Thailand: A Descriptive Qualitative Study
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Study Design
2.2. Study Setting
2.3. Data Collection and Tool Development
- (1)
- How do you feel about the RDU policy?
- (2)
- What have you learned from RDU policy?
- (3)
- Is there any problem during the RDU policy implementation?
2.4. Recruitment of Participants
2.5. Data Collection Process
2.6. Data Analysis
2.7. Ethical Issues
3. Results
3.1. RDU Is a Welcome Opportunity
“I feel good about RDU. I think this is good. It’s wonderful. This is because we follow the (prescribing) criteria and if anything goes wrong, we can always say that we have followed the written standard. The standards will protect us.”(FG#1-N6).
“I don’t feel frustrated at all. I mean our current (nursing) scope of prescribing practice is just fine. We prescribe within our scope of practice, and we are safe.”(FG#2-N10).
3.2. Rational Drug Use as Quality of Healthcare
“When the overuse of antibiotics is found, the pop-up ring will alarm in the computer program. Therefore, we are careful to prescribe the antibiotics, we recheck again and again if the patients’ symptoms need antibiotics.”(QI#5-N11).
“Are the patients really safe? Do drug resistant infections really decrease?”(QI#4-N9).
“There is no evidence or any reports about RDU efficacy.”(QI#5-N11).
3.3. RDU Requires Multidisciplinary Collaboration
“It can increase our confidence for the treatment and drug prescribing. We can direct messages and video calls via LINE or phone to consult a doctor, and he will give suggestions and explanations about the disease.”(QI#4-N9).
“It looks like we have the backup from a doctor. I feel safe if I consult the case with the doctor.”(QI#5-N11).
3.4. RDU Reinvents Productive Interactions between Nurses and Patients
“It is a good opportunity for nurses to promote people’s health. Community nurse’s obligation should provide health prevention and health promotion more than treatment.”(QI#4-N9).
“Our primary care center worked on RDU both in the primary care center and the outreach. We went to every village that we were responsible for (10 villages). We gave the knowledge about infectious diseases, protection, and rational antibiotics use.”(QI#3-N2).
3.5. Challenges over Control of Medications Prescribed or Purchased Elsewhere
“I found NSAIDs, antibiotics and “Yaa chud” (which include analgesic, NSAIDs, and steroids in one set and the patient will take them all at one time) available which were prohibited in community groceries. There is no strict penalty and measure for them except they had to pay a fine that did not come too much.”(FG#1-N)
“The advertisement from radio, information from other patients, and word of mouth in the community are the most influence on self-medication.”(QI#5-N11)
“Nurses always strictly prescribed medicine following the RDU guideline, while some doctors prescribe the medicine depending on patient conditions. I had seen a doctor prescribing overuse of medicine to a hill tribe patient who lived in a remote area. I have ever mentioned the problem, but the doctor still prescribes. I thought the doctor might have his own reason to do that.”(QI#3-N2).
4. Discussion
4.1. RDU Is a Welcome Opportunity
4.2. RDU Used as Quality of Healthcare
4.3. RDU Requires Multidisciplinary Collaboration
4.4. RDU Reinvents Productive Interactions between Nurses and Patients
4.5. Challenges over Control of Medications Prescribed or Purchased Elsewhere
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Nurse | Focus Group | In-Depth Interview | Official Title | Age (Year) | Professional Experience (Year) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
N1 | FG#1 | Nurse Practitioner | 58 | 34 | |
N2 | FG#1 | QI#3 | Nurse Practitioner | 52 | 30 |
N3 | FG#1 | Nurse Practitioner | 52 | 28 | |
N4 | FG#1 | Nurse Practitioner | 43 | 21 | |
N5 | FG#1 | Nurse Practitioner | 47 | 24 | |
N6 | FG#1 | QI#1 | Nurse Practitioner | 41 | 20 |
N7 | FG#2 | Nurse Practitioner | 29 | 4 | |
N8 | FG#2 | Nurse Practitioner | 30 | 8 | |
N9 | FG#2 | QI#4 | Nurse Practitioner | 30 | 5 |
N10 | FG#2 | Nurse Practitioner | 26 | 4 | |
N11 | FG#2 | QI#5 | Registered Nurse | 29 | 4 |
N12 | QI#2 | Registered Nurse | 28 | 4 | |
mean = 38.75 SD = 11.42 | mean = 15.50 SD = 11.78 |
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Intahphuak, S.; Lorga, T.; Tipwareerom, W. Community Health Nurses’ Perspective on the Introduced Rational Drug Use Policy in Primary Care Settings in Thailand: A Descriptive Qualitative Study. Trop. Med. Infect. Dis. 2022, 7, 304. https://doi.org/10.3390/tropicalmed7100304
Intahphuak S, Lorga T, Tipwareerom W. Community Health Nurses’ Perspective on the Introduced Rational Drug Use Policy in Primary Care Settings in Thailand: A Descriptive Qualitative Study. Tropical Medicine and Infectious Disease. 2022; 7(10):304. https://doi.org/10.3390/tropicalmed7100304
Chicago/Turabian StyleIntahphuak, Sophaphan, Thaworn Lorga, and Worawan Tipwareerom. 2022. "Community Health Nurses’ Perspective on the Introduced Rational Drug Use Policy in Primary Care Settings in Thailand: A Descriptive Qualitative Study" Tropical Medicine and Infectious Disease 7, no. 10: 304. https://doi.org/10.3390/tropicalmed7100304
APA StyleIntahphuak, S., Lorga, T., & Tipwareerom, W. (2022). Community Health Nurses’ Perspective on the Introduced Rational Drug Use Policy in Primary Care Settings in Thailand: A Descriptive Qualitative Study. Tropical Medicine and Infectious Disease, 7(10), 304. https://doi.org/10.3390/tropicalmed7100304