Evaluating community pharmacy practice in Qatar using simulated patient method: Acute gastroenteritis management
Author | IBRAHIM, Mohamed I. |
Author | PALAIAN, Subish |
Author | AL-SULAITI, Fatima |
Author | EL-SHAMI, Somia |
Available date | 2021-06-07T09:59:13Z |
Publication Date | 2016 |
Publication Name | Pharmacy Practice |
Resource | Scopus |
Abstract | Objective: To evaluate Qatari pharmacists' prescribing, labeling, dispensing and counseling practices in response to acute community-acquired gastroenteritis. Methods: The simulated patient method was used in this study. Thirty pharmacies in Doha were randomly selected and further randomized into two groups: Face-to-Face (n=15) vs. Telephone-call (n=15) per simulated patient; 2 simulated patients were involved. Prescribing, labeling, dispensing and counseling practices were assessed. Data analysis was performed using Mann-Whitney and chi square tests at alpha=0.05. Results: Most pharmacists prescribed and dispensed medicines (96%), including antimicrobials (43.9%), antidiarrheals (36%), antiemetics (5.1%) and antipyretics (3%). Counseling practices were poor (62.1% in the face-to-face group vs 70% in the telephone-call group did not counsel simulated patients about the dispensed medicines; p-value=0.50). In more than one-third of the encounters, at least one labeling parameter was missing. The duration of each interaction in minutes was not significantly different between the groups [median (IQR); 3(4.25) in the face-to-face group versus 2(0.25) in the telephone-call group; p-value=0.77]. No significant differences in prescribing or dispensing behaviors were present between groups (p-value>0.05). Conclusion: Qatar community pharmacists' labeling, dispensing, and counseling practices were below expectation, thus urging the need for continuous professional development |
Sponsor | Funding: This research has been funded by Qatar University student research grant (Grant No.: QUST-CPHFALL-12/13-2). |
Language | en |
Publisher | Grupo de Investigacion en Atencion Farmaceutica |
Subject | activated carbon adsorbent analgesic agent antiamebic agent antidiarrheal agent antiemetic agent antiinfective agent antipyretic agent diclofenac diloxanide domperidone furazolidone histamine H2 receptor antagonist ibuprofen loperamide metoclopramide metronidazole muscarinic receptor blocking agent pectin ranitidine tinidazole vitamin acute gastroenteritis Article controlled study human interpersonal communication major clinical study medical information patient counseling patient safety pharmacist pharmacy pilot study professional practice Qatar randomized controlled trial teaching telephone interview |
Type | Article |
Issue Number | 4 |
Volume Number | 14 |
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Pharmacy Research [1315 items ]