pharmacy setting
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2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Urmah Mahrosh ◽  
Ayesha baber kawaish ◽  
Mateen Abbas

Abstract Background The healthcare system in Pakistan is facing a shortage of human resources and appropriate and sustainable financial measures and therefore fails to provide optimum services to the population of Pakistan. Furthermore, research is limited in the healthcare institutes; therefore, there is a scarcity of information about patient satisfaction with pharmacists and pharmacy services in Pakistan. As evident from the inadequate information in the literature, patients’ opinions about the pharmacy services in Pakistan are important [1]. Therefore, the current study was designed to assess patient satisfaction with the pharmacy performance of the outpatient pharmacy and its variation with socio-demographic characteristics in twin cities of Pakistan (Rawalpindi and Islamabad). Method A cross-sectional study design was used to assess the patient satisfaction through convenience sampling technique. Minimum sample size of 250 respondents who visit pharmacy department of public and private hospital for pharmaceutical care were included in this study. A pre validated tool was used to assess the patient satisfaction. Data was clean coded and import into spss for analysis. Descriptive and inferential statistic was applied to calculate frequency, standard deviation, mean deviation and p value to find the association among different domain of patient satisfaction with different demographic characteristics of respondents. Result Current study shows overall patients were satisfied from pharmacy services provided by government and private hospitals. Furthermore patient satisfaction towards pharmacist medication advice was very good however patient satisfaction towards pharmacist approach was good while patient perception with pharmacy setting, drug availability and cost were underrated. Significance difference (p ≤ 0.05) was observed in pharmacist’s approach with different gender, age groups and qualification. No significant difference (p ≥ 0.05) was observed in pharmacy setting drug availability and cost with different gender, age groups and marital status of respondents. However Significance difference (p ≤ 0.05) was observed in pharmacy setting drug availability and cost with different level of education patients with less education had better satisfaction as compared to highly educated respondents. Furthermore Significance difference (p ≤ 0.05) was observed in pharmacy setting drug availability and cost with occupation. Self-employee and government employee had low satisfaction score while other had better satisfactory score. Significance difference (p ≤ 0.05) was observed in pharmacist’s approach with different gender, age groups and qualification. Females had better satisfactory score as compared to female. Younger age group had better satisfaction as compared to elderly. Patients belong to higher educational groups had better satisfaction toward pharmacist approach as compared to low qualification groups respondents. Furthermore No significant difference (p ≥ 0.05) was observed in pharmacist’s approach with marital status and number of visits Conclusion Current study concluded that overall patient had average satisfaction score. Patients shows a better satisfaction towards pharmacist behavior/ way of handling the patients, information provided by pharmacist regarding medicine. Patient had less satisfaction towards the location of pharmacy, Availability and affordability of medicine. Patient shows negative satisfaction regarding waiting area and counselling area at in door patient pharmacy. It has been observed that educated respondents shows high level of satisfaction towards pharmacist availability and information provided by the pharmacist.


Blood ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 138 (Supplement 1) ◽  
pp. 4128-4128
Author(s):  
John Hou ◽  
Heather S Kirkham ◽  
Jessica Buzzelli ◽  
Amy Pfeifer ◽  
Alexandra Broadus

Abstract INTRODUCTION Previous studies have demonstrated the importance of adherence to oral tyrosine kinase inhibitors in improving outcomes, including achieving a complete cytogenic response. Patients with chronic myeloid leukemia (CML) that had a suboptimal response were more likely to be non-adherent. Early identification and intervention based on predictors of non-adherence may lead to improved outcomes for patients in the non-trial setting. This research aimed to determine the rate of adherence and persistence to oral tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKI) and to assess associated effect of patient characteristics using real world data from a retail pharmacy setting. METHODS This retrospective analysis of administrative pharmacy claims data included a random sample of 5000 patients who filled at least one TKI medication (bosutinib, dasatinib, imatinib, nilotinib) from national retail pharmacy chain in the study period of May 1, 2018 to April 30, 2021. Data elements included prescription fill attributes, patient-level demographics, medication adherence by therapeutic class (TKI, antidiabetics, antihypertensives and antihyperlipidemics), as well as patient health conditions and diagnoses. Patient adherence barrier data were also analyzed for a subset of patients who received select clinical interventions. This research was reviewed and approved by Advarra IRB as exempt (Pro00044844). Medication adherence was measured using the proportion of days covered (PDC) metric. For each therapeutic class, PDC was measured from first fill date for that class from May 01 2018 to April 30 2021, followed for maximum of 365 days, and calculated as the ratio of the number of days of medication available and the measurement period. A cut-off to indicate suboptimum adherence of <85% was used for TKI and <80% for other classes. Length of therapy was measured as number of days a patient had underline medication coverage from the index date to the start date of medication gap that was>45 days. PDC and length of therapy and their influential factors were assessed using generalized linear models. Persistency rates were calculated descriptively and using Kaplan-Meier analyses. Associations among PDCs in TKI and common chronic medications were assessed using multivariate correlation statistics. All statistics were conducted using SAS 9.4. RESULTS The random sample of patients had a mean age of 61.7 years (median=65.6, IQR= =51, 75) and 49.9% were male. TKI use in our sample was predominantly imatinib (2,857, 57.1%) and dasatinib (1,428, 28.6%) with fewer patients on nilotinib (556, 11.1%) or bosutinib (159, 3.2%). Among those patients with adherence barrier data, the average number of barriers was 1.7. Among TKI users, 38.3% also had hypertension, 13.6% had diabetes and 15.6% had hyperlipidemia. Percent of TKI users who had common chronic conditions and who were taking corresponding therapies were 38.2%, 33.9%, and 33.3% for hypertension, hyperlipidemia, and diabetes, correspondingly. Mean TKI PDC was 0.797 (95% CL 0.789 to 0.804) with a median of 0.889. Over half of patients (55% patients) had a PDC>=.85. Mean TKI length of therapy was 18.3 months with a median of 15 months with differences by therapy. Correlation of TKI PDC to three common chronic therapy PDC were all low: 0.095 for antidiabetics; 0.032 for antihypertensives; 0.083 for antilipidemics) and not statistically significant. Age was a significant predicator of PDC, with every 10-year increase in age associated with a 2% increase in PDC. When a patient had previously stated adherence barriers, PDC was estimated to decrease by 1.7% for each barrier faced by the patient. Only a small portion (33%-38%) of TKI patients, who had a diagnosis for a common chronic condition, had a claim for the corresponding therapeutic class. CONCLUSIONS Adherence to TKI was influenced by non-modifiable risk such as age and modifiable risks such as the number of adherence barriers. Many patients on TKI who also had a common chronic condition were not taking medications for their chronic condition, noting a discordance in care. Ongoing capture of barrier data beyond specialty medications will help predict patient adherence behavior and identify targeted interventions. Disclosures No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


2021 ◽  
Vol 8 (Supplement_1) ◽  
pp. S192-S192
Author(s):  
Khalid Eljaaly ◽  
Ahmed Al-Jedai ◽  
Yasser Almogbel ◽  
Nasser Alqahtani ◽  
Hajer Almudaiheem ◽  
...  

Abstract Background High rates of non-prescription dispending of antimicrobials has led to a significant increase in antimicrobial overuse and misuse in Saudi Arabia (SA). The objective of this study was to evaluate antimicrobial utilization following enforcement of a new prescription-only antimicrobial dispensing policy in the community pharmacy setting in SA. Methods Data were extracted from the IQVIA database between May 2017 and May 2019. Antimicrobial consumption rate based on the sales, defined daily dose in grams (DDD), DDD/1000 inhabitants’/day (DID), and antimicrobial claims for pre-policy (May 2017 to April 2018) and post-policy (June 2018 to May 2019) periods was assessed. Results Overall antimicrobial utilization slightly declined (~9-10%) in post-policy vs. pre-policy period (sales, 31,334 vs.34,492 thousand units; DDD, 183,134 vs. 202,936 thousand grams), with an increase in the number of claims (~16%) after policy implementation. There was a sudden drop in the consumption rate immediately after policy enforcement; however, the values increased subsequently, matching closely to the pre-policy values. Consumption patterns were similar in both periods. Penicillins were the most commonly used antimicrobial (sales, 14,700 - 11,648 thousand units; DDD, 71,038 - 91,227 thousand grams; DID, 2.88 - 3.78). For both the periods, the highest dip in utilization was observed in July (sales, 1,027 - 1,559 thousand units; DDD, 6,194 - 9,399 thousand grams), while the highest spike was in March/October (sales, 3,346 - 3,884 thousand units; DDD, 22,329 - 19,453 thousand grams). Conclusion Non-prescription antimicrobial utilization reduced minimally following policy implementation in the community pharmacy setting across SA. Measures to aid effective implementation of prescription-only regulations are necessary. Disclosures All Authors: No reported disclosures


2021 ◽  
Vol 17 (6) ◽  
pp. 445-453
Author(s):  
Angelina Vascimini, PharmD ◽  
Kevin Duane, PharmD ◽  
Stacey Curtis, PharmD

Objective: The opioid epidemic is frequently discussed including the staggering numbers involved with coprescribing opioids and benzodiazepines associated with death. Community pharmacists, with the help of a system intervention, have a unique opportunity to help reduce the coprescribing of benzodiazepines and opioids and reduce the associated risk of death.Design: A single center retrospective chart review was conducted after a system intervention was placed, as a quality improvement project, from November 2019 to May 2020.Setting: Independent community pharmacy.Patients/participants: Data included demographics, dosing of each medication pre- and post-intervention, and naloxone status.Main outcome(s) measures: The primary outcome evaluated was reduction in dose/discontinuation of these prescriptions. The secondary outcome evaluated was the number of naloxone prescriptions ordered per protocol and picked up.Results: The primary outcome did not show statistical difference; however, the secondary outcomes showed statistical significance.Conclusion: In conclusion, community pharmacists, with the help of evolving technologies, can reduce harm associated with the coprescribing of benzodiazepines and opioids.


Author(s):  
Melia McDaniel ◽  
Elly Glazier ◽  
NiNi Truong ◽  
Leslie Marsh ◽  
Noah Cahill ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Morgan K. Stoa ◽  
Caitlin K. Frail ◽  
Joel F. Farley ◽  
Deborah L. Pestka ◽  
Carrie M. Blanchard

Author(s):  
Erin Connolly ◽  
Kenneth McCall ◽  
Sara Couture ◽  
Meghan Sullivan ◽  
Brian J. Piper ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Vol 7 (1) ◽  
pp. 34-42
Author(s):  
>Abdullah Khan ◽  
>Anandarajagopal Kalusalingam ◽  
>Ching Siang Tan ◽  
>H. Jaasminerjiit Kaur ◽  
>Kah Seng Lee ◽  
...  

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