Impact of guideline awareness in public pharmacies on counseling of patients with acute or chronic constipation in a survey of pharmacy personnel

Abstract Background Constipation is often self-managed by patients and guidelines are available to aid healthcare professionals in the counseling of patients for self-management. Therefore, we have explored the knowledge and attitude of pharmacy personnel towards guidelines for the management of acu...

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Main Authors: Marion Eberlin, Sabine Landes, Doerthe Biber-Feiter, Martin C. Michel
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2020-06-01
Series:BMC Gastroenterology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12876-020-01338-4
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spelling doaj-c667ed3fffeb446bbfc2e02b35956c102020-11-25T03:59:36ZengBMCBMC Gastroenterology1471-230X2020-06-012011610.1186/s12876-020-01338-4Impact of guideline awareness in public pharmacies on counseling of patients with acute or chronic constipation in a survey of pharmacy personnelMarion Eberlin0Sabine Landes1Doerthe Biber-Feiter2Martin C. Michel3Consumer Healthcare Medical Affairs, Sanofi-Aventis Deutschland GmbHConsumer Healthcare Medical Affairs, Sanofi-Aventis Deutschland GmbHConsumer Healthcare CMI, Sanofi-Aventis Deutschland GmbH, Industriepark HoechstDepartment of Pharmacology, Johannes Gutenberg UniversityAbstract Background Constipation is often self-managed by patients and guidelines are available to aid healthcare professionals in the counseling of patients for self-management. Therefore, we have explored the knowledge and attitude of pharmacy personnel towards guidelines for the management of acute and functional chronic constipation and how they affects their recommendations. Methods An online survey was conducted among 201 pharmacists and pharmacy technicians from an existing panel. They were presented with two typical cases, a 62-year old woman with functional chronic constipation and a 42-year old woman with travel plans. For each case, they were asked about their treatment recommendations and the underlying rationale. Thereafter, they were provided with contents from an applicable national guideline and asked again about their recommendations and the underlying rationale. In line with the exploratory nature, data were analyzed in a descriptive manner only. Results Before exposure to guideline content, the most frequent recommendations for chronic constipation were macrogol, fiber and lactulose and for acute constipation sodium picosulfate, bisacodyl and enemas. Following guideline exposure, the most frequent recommendations for chronic constipation were macrogol, bisacodyl and sodium picosulfate and for acute constipation bisacodyl, sodium picosulfate and macrogol (all three equally recommended by the guideline for the management of acute and chronic constipation). Correspondingly, the rationale behind the recommendations shifted with guideline conformity becoming a leading reason. Conclusions Awareness of the content of an applicable guideline on the management of constipation was poor among pharmacy personnel. Accordingly, recommendations in many cases were not in line with the guideline. Greater awareness of guideline content is desirable to enable more evidence-based recommendations in the management of constipation.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12876-020-01338-4ConstipationSelf-medicationTreatment guideline
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Marion Eberlin
Sabine Landes
Doerthe Biber-Feiter
Martin C. Michel
spellingShingle Marion Eberlin
Sabine Landes
Doerthe Biber-Feiter
Martin C. Michel
Impact of guideline awareness in public pharmacies on counseling of patients with acute or chronic constipation in a survey of pharmacy personnel
BMC Gastroenterology
Constipation
Self-medication
Treatment guideline
author_facet Marion Eberlin
Sabine Landes
Doerthe Biber-Feiter
Martin C. Michel
author_sort Marion Eberlin
title Impact of guideline awareness in public pharmacies on counseling of patients with acute or chronic constipation in a survey of pharmacy personnel
title_short Impact of guideline awareness in public pharmacies on counseling of patients with acute or chronic constipation in a survey of pharmacy personnel
title_full Impact of guideline awareness in public pharmacies on counseling of patients with acute or chronic constipation in a survey of pharmacy personnel
title_fullStr Impact of guideline awareness in public pharmacies on counseling of patients with acute or chronic constipation in a survey of pharmacy personnel
title_full_unstemmed Impact of guideline awareness in public pharmacies on counseling of patients with acute or chronic constipation in a survey of pharmacy personnel
title_sort impact of guideline awareness in public pharmacies on counseling of patients with acute or chronic constipation in a survey of pharmacy personnel
publisher BMC
series BMC Gastroenterology
issn 1471-230X
publishDate 2020-06-01
description Abstract Background Constipation is often self-managed by patients and guidelines are available to aid healthcare professionals in the counseling of patients for self-management. Therefore, we have explored the knowledge and attitude of pharmacy personnel towards guidelines for the management of acute and functional chronic constipation and how they affects their recommendations. Methods An online survey was conducted among 201 pharmacists and pharmacy technicians from an existing panel. They were presented with two typical cases, a 62-year old woman with functional chronic constipation and a 42-year old woman with travel plans. For each case, they were asked about their treatment recommendations and the underlying rationale. Thereafter, they were provided with contents from an applicable national guideline and asked again about their recommendations and the underlying rationale. In line with the exploratory nature, data were analyzed in a descriptive manner only. Results Before exposure to guideline content, the most frequent recommendations for chronic constipation were macrogol, fiber and lactulose and for acute constipation sodium picosulfate, bisacodyl and enemas. Following guideline exposure, the most frequent recommendations for chronic constipation were macrogol, bisacodyl and sodium picosulfate and for acute constipation bisacodyl, sodium picosulfate and macrogol (all three equally recommended by the guideline for the management of acute and chronic constipation). Correspondingly, the rationale behind the recommendations shifted with guideline conformity becoming a leading reason. Conclusions Awareness of the content of an applicable guideline on the management of constipation was poor among pharmacy personnel. Accordingly, recommendations in many cases were not in line with the guideline. Greater awareness of guideline content is desirable to enable more evidence-based recommendations in the management of constipation.
topic Constipation
Self-medication
Treatment guideline
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12876-020-01338-4
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