4.2 Article

Consumer perspectives of expanded practice in rural community pharmacy

Journal

RESEARCH IN SOCIAL & ADMINISTRATIVE PHARMACY
Volume 17, Issue 2, Pages 362-367

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.sapharm.2020.03.022

Keywords

Extended practice; Scope of practice; Pharmacy practice; Remote; Pharmacies; Models of care

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This study investigated consumers' perspectives on expanded pharmacy services in rural and remote areas of Australia, finding that consumers overwhelmingly support the provision of additional services. Vaccinations, chronic disease management, and mental health services were among the most popular choices, with remote areas and age influencing service preferences.
Background: People living in rural and remote regions have mortality and morbidity rates worse than their counterparts in metropolitan cities. Distance to access healthcare and limited access to health professionals highlights the need for expanded pharmacy services to address the health disparity facing rural and remote Australia. Objectives: Examining consumers' perspective of expanded pharmacy services with a view to improving the health of their local community is a focus of the study. Methods: A questionnaire was provided to 20 rural and remote community pharmacies across Australia, to be administered to pharmacy consumers during July-September 2019. The questionnaire involved consumers choosing expanded services that they would like to see provided by their local pharmacy. The data were manually entered, exported into IBM SPSS Statistic 25 and summarised using descriptive statistics. Results: 406 consumers from rural and remote locations completed the questionnaire. Vaccinations, chronic disease management and mental health services represented eight out of the ten most frequently chosen services. Over 95% of respondents agreed or strongly agreed that they would support the expanded services and that pharmacists have the required skills and knowledge to deliver these services. Findings indicated that the remote and very remote participants chose all of the 26 services more frequently than those in large and medium towns. Age also significantly influenced the frequency of choosing particular services, including osteoporosis testing, vision and eye checks, counselling services, swallowing checks, diet checks and breastfeeding advice and support. Conclusion: This study demonstrates that consumers believe that the health of the people in their community will improve with the provision of expanded services. These preliminary findings provide useful baseline information suggesting the development of expanded pharmacy services in rural and remote communities is likely to be well accepted by consumers.

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