Community pharmacists and mental illness: a survey of service provision, stigma, attitudes and beliefs

Background Half of Americans experience mental illness during their lifetime. Significant opportunity exists for community pharmacists to deliver services to these patients; however, personal and practice-related barriers may prevent full engagement. Objective To assess the demographics, practice ch...

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Veröffentlicht in:International journal of clinical pharmacy 2018-10, Vol.40 (5), p.1096-1105
Hauptverfasser: Giannetti, Vincent, Caley, Charles F., Kamal, Khalid M., Covvey, Jordan R., McKee, Jerry, Wells, Barbara G., Najarian, Dean M., Dunn, Tyler J., Vadagam, Pratyusha
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Background Half of Americans experience mental illness during their lifetime. Significant opportunity exists for community pharmacists to deliver services to these patients; however, personal and practice-related barriers may prevent full engagement. Objective To assess the demographics, practice characteristics, service provision, stigma, attitudes and beliefs of a national sample of community pharmacists towards individuals with mental illness. Setting National random sample of 3008 community pharmacists in the USA. Method 101-item cross-sectional mailed survey questionnaire on: (1) demographics, (2) knowledge and practice characteristics, (3) provision of clinical pharmacy services, and (4) comparative opinions. Main outcome measure Scaled measures of service provision (comfort, confidence, willingness and interest) and comparative opinions (stigma, attitudes and beliefs) of mental illness, four linear regression models to predict service provision. Results A total of 239 responses were received (response rate 7.95%). Across pharmacy services, ratings for willingness/interest were higher than those for comfort/confidence. Pharmacists who reported providing medication therapy management (MTM) services for patients reported higher comfort (18.36 vs. 17.46, p  
ISSN:2210-7703
2210-7711
DOI:10.1007/s11096-018-0619-7