Determinants of intentions to monitor antihypertensive medication adherence in Irish community pharmacy: a factorial survey

Abstract Background Community pharmacy represents an important setting to identify patients who may benefit from an adherence intervention, however it remains unclear whether it would be feasible to monitor antihypertensive adherence within the workflow of community pharmacy. The aim of this study w...

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Main Authors: Paul Dillon, Ronald McDowell, Susan M. Smith, Paul Gallagher, Gráinne Cousins
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2019-09-01
Series:BMC Family Practice
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12875-019-1016-6
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spelling doaj-07ade8909b304ca18940f64a5fbc9de72020-11-25T03:00:26ZengBMCBMC Family Practice1471-22962019-09-0120111410.1186/s12875-019-1016-6Determinants of intentions to monitor antihypertensive medication adherence in Irish community pharmacy: a factorial surveyPaul Dillon0Ronald McDowell1Susan M. Smith2Paul Gallagher3Gráinne Cousins4School of Pharmacy, RCSIHRB Centre for Primary Care Research, RCSIDepartment of General Practice and HRB Centre for Primary Care Research, RCSISchool of Pharmacy, RCSISchool of Pharmacy, RCSIAbstract Background Community pharmacy represents an important setting to identify patients who may benefit from an adherence intervention, however it remains unclear whether it would be feasible to monitor antihypertensive adherence within the workflow of community pharmacy. The aim of this study was to identify facilitators and barriers to monitoring antihypertensive medication adherence of older adults at the point of repeat dispensing. Methods We undertook a factorial survey of Irish community pharmacists, guided by a conceptual model adapted from the Theory of Planned Behaviour (TPB). Respondents completed four sections, 1) five factorial vignettes (clinical scenario of repeat dispensing), 2) a medication monitoring attitude measure, 3) subjective norms and self-efficacy questions, and 4) demographic and workplace questions. Barriers and facilitators to adherence monitoring behaviour were identified in factorial vignette analysis using multivariate multilevel linear modelling, testing the effect of both contextual factors embedded within the vignettes (section 1), and respondent-level factors (sections 2–4) on likelihood to perform three adherence monitoring behaviours in response to the vignettes. Results Survey invites (n = 1543) were sent via email and 258 completed online survey responses were received; two-thirds of respondents were women, and one-third were qualified pharmacists for at least 15 years. In factorial vignette analysis, pharmacists were more inclined to monitor antihypertensive medication adherence by examining refill-patterns from pharmacy records than asking patients questions about their adherence or medication beliefs. Pharmacists with more positive attitudes towards medication monitoring and normative beliefs that other pharmacists monitored adherence, were more likely to monitor adherence. Contextual factors also influenced pharmacists’ likelihood to perform the three adherence monitoring behaviours, including time-pressures and the number of days late the patient collected their repeat prescription. Pharmacists’ normative beliefs and the number of days late the patient collected their repeat prescription had the largest quantitative influence on responses. Conclusions This survey identified that positive pharmacist attitudes and normative beliefs can facilitate adherence monitoring within the current workflow; however contextual time-barriers may prevent adherence monitoring. Future research should consider these findings when designing a pharmacist-led adherence intervention to be integrated within current pharmacy workflow.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12875-019-1016-6Adherence interventionsCommunity pharmacyFactorial surveyMedication adherenceMedication monitoringPharmacist attitudes
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Paul Dillon
Ronald McDowell
Susan M. Smith
Paul Gallagher
Gráinne Cousins
spellingShingle Paul Dillon
Ronald McDowell
Susan M. Smith
Paul Gallagher
Gráinne Cousins
Determinants of intentions to monitor antihypertensive medication adherence in Irish community pharmacy: a factorial survey
BMC Family Practice
Adherence interventions
Community pharmacy
Factorial survey
Medication adherence
Medication monitoring
Pharmacist attitudes
author_facet Paul Dillon
Ronald McDowell
Susan M. Smith
Paul Gallagher
Gráinne Cousins
author_sort Paul Dillon
title Determinants of intentions to monitor antihypertensive medication adherence in Irish community pharmacy: a factorial survey
title_short Determinants of intentions to monitor antihypertensive medication adherence in Irish community pharmacy: a factorial survey
title_full Determinants of intentions to monitor antihypertensive medication adherence in Irish community pharmacy: a factorial survey
title_fullStr Determinants of intentions to monitor antihypertensive medication adherence in Irish community pharmacy: a factorial survey
title_full_unstemmed Determinants of intentions to monitor antihypertensive medication adherence in Irish community pharmacy: a factorial survey
title_sort determinants of intentions to monitor antihypertensive medication adherence in irish community pharmacy: a factorial survey
publisher BMC
series BMC Family Practice
issn 1471-2296
publishDate 2019-09-01
description Abstract Background Community pharmacy represents an important setting to identify patients who may benefit from an adherence intervention, however it remains unclear whether it would be feasible to monitor antihypertensive adherence within the workflow of community pharmacy. The aim of this study was to identify facilitators and barriers to monitoring antihypertensive medication adherence of older adults at the point of repeat dispensing. Methods We undertook a factorial survey of Irish community pharmacists, guided by a conceptual model adapted from the Theory of Planned Behaviour (TPB). Respondents completed four sections, 1) five factorial vignettes (clinical scenario of repeat dispensing), 2) a medication monitoring attitude measure, 3) subjective norms and self-efficacy questions, and 4) demographic and workplace questions. Barriers and facilitators to adherence monitoring behaviour were identified in factorial vignette analysis using multivariate multilevel linear modelling, testing the effect of both contextual factors embedded within the vignettes (section 1), and respondent-level factors (sections 2–4) on likelihood to perform three adherence monitoring behaviours in response to the vignettes. Results Survey invites (n = 1543) were sent via email and 258 completed online survey responses were received; two-thirds of respondents were women, and one-third were qualified pharmacists for at least 15 years. In factorial vignette analysis, pharmacists were more inclined to monitor antihypertensive medication adherence by examining refill-patterns from pharmacy records than asking patients questions about their adherence or medication beliefs. Pharmacists with more positive attitudes towards medication monitoring and normative beliefs that other pharmacists monitored adherence, were more likely to monitor adherence. Contextual factors also influenced pharmacists’ likelihood to perform the three adherence monitoring behaviours, including time-pressures and the number of days late the patient collected their repeat prescription. Pharmacists’ normative beliefs and the number of days late the patient collected their repeat prescription had the largest quantitative influence on responses. Conclusions This survey identified that positive pharmacist attitudes and normative beliefs can facilitate adherence monitoring within the current workflow; however contextual time-barriers may prevent adherence monitoring. Future research should consider these findings when designing a pharmacist-led adherence intervention to be integrated within current pharmacy workflow.
topic Adherence interventions
Community pharmacy
Factorial survey
Medication adherence
Medication monitoring
Pharmacist attitudes
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12875-019-1016-6
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