药剂师对阿片类药物使用障碍筛查和简单干预需求的定性探索。

Deepika Rao, Christine McAtee, Meg Mercy, Olayinka O Shiyanbola, James H Ford
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:筛查和简单干预(SBI)有助于识别阿片类药物的安全风险,医疗保健专业人员可以在不大幅增加工作量的情况下进行相应干预。药剂师是最容易接触到的医疗保健专业人员之一,在提供 SBI 方面具有得天独厚的优势。为了设计出一种极具实施潜力的有效干预措施,我们探讨了药剂师在针对阿片类药物使用障碍的 SBI 方面的需求和障碍:我们使用实施研究综合框架 (CFIR),对社区药剂师进行了 11 次 60 分钟的半结构式访谈。我们有目的地抽取了在不同药店(小型独立药店、大型连锁药店、专业零售药店)和不同职位(经理、店主、全职/兼职药剂师)执业的英语药剂师。根据 CFIR 构建采用演绎式内容分析法对记录进行分析,然后进行归纳式开放编码。利用数据收集和分析的理论框架、药剂师角色的多样化样本、同行汇报以及每份记录的两名独立编码者,共同提高了我们研究的可信度和可转移性。数据收集和分析一直持续到数据饱和为止:药剂师描述了他们与同事之间良好的工作关系、对新举措持开放态度的组织文化,并认为 SBI 与他们的组织目标和药房结构相匹配,这些都是未来实施 SBI 的有利因素。药剂师的动力来自于改善患者疗效、与患者进行更多互动以及临床角色,这些都是个人层面的促进因素。他们还描述了对患者的耻辱感、对改变的混合需求以及对 SBI 的缺乏了解,这些都是需要解决的潜在障碍。药剂师认为,SBI 模式适应性强,并不复杂,而且收益大于实施成本:我们通过以实施为重点的严格定性研究,弥补了目前 SBI 文献的不足,主要是缺乏对实施和背景数据的关注。我们的探索性发现对未来基于药房的 SBI 实施具有直接影响。
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An Implementation-Focused Qualitative Exploration of Pharmacist Needs Regarding an Opioid Use Disorder Screening and Brief Intervention.

Background: Screening and brief interventions (SBI) can help identify opioid safety risks and healthcare professionals can accordingly intervene without a significant increase in workload. Pharmacists, one of the most accessible healthcare professionals, are uniquely positioned to offer SBI. To design an effective intervention with high potential for implementation, we explored pharmacist needs and barriers regarding SBI for opioid use disorders.

Methods: Using the Consolidated Framework for Implementation Research (CFIR), we conducted 11 semi-structured 60-minute interviews with community pharmacists. We used a purposeful sample of English-speaking pharmacists practicing in varied pharmacies (small independent, large-chain, specialty-retail) and positions (managers, owners, full-time/part-time pharmacists). Transcriptions were analyzed using deductive content analysis based on CFIR constructs, followed by inductive open coding. Utilizing a theoretical framework for data collection and analysis, a diverse sample of pharmacist roles, peer debriefing, and 2 independent coders for each transcript, altogether increased the credibility and transferability of our research. Data collection and analysis continued until data saturation was achieved.

Results: Pharmacists described good working relationships with colleagues, organization cultures that were open to new initiatives, and believed the SBI to be compatible with their organization goals and pharmacy structure, which are facilitators for future SBI implementation. Pharmacists were motivated by improved patient outcomes, more patient interaction and clinical roles, representing facilitators at the individual level. They also described stigma toward patients, mixed need for change, and lack of knowledge regarding SBI, which are potential barriers to be addressed. Pharmacists believed that the SBI model was adaptable, not complicated, and benefits outweighed implementation costs.

Conclusions: We addressed current SBI literature gaps-mainly lack of focus on implementation and contextual data, through rigorous implementation-focused qualitative research. Our exploratory findings have direct implications on future pharmacy-based SBI implementation.

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