Abstract
Community pharmacists are involved in the health delivery sector through the provision of services that result in improved patient outcomes and optimization of pharmaceutical care. With growing concern about increasing prevalence of mental disorders in children and adolescents, the expanded roles of pharmacists in providing mental health services may be essential. This study aimed to explore the perspective of community pharmacists in child and adolescent mental healthcare (CAMH) service provision. A qualitative study employing semi-structured face-to-face individual interviews was conducted among 25 community pharmacists in Accra to explore their perspectives and experiences in service provision for children and adolescents with mental illness. Interviews were audio recorded, transcribed, and thematically analyzed in line with the study objective. Emerging themes from the results are presented and supported by narratives from the community pharmacists. Most of the participants were female (n = 15, 60%), 32.32 ± 10 years old and have an average of 7.68 ± 9.4 years of professional practice. The m main themes identified from the findings were (1) Illness perception (2) Use of medicines (3) CAMH service provision practices and (4) Barriers to CAMH service provision. The participants' perception about child and adolescent mental illness was along the dimensions of causal beliefs. They also acknowledged the role of medications in symptom reduction and improved mental health outcomes while indicating their safety concerns about these medicines. Community pharmacists were involved in CAMH activities by providing medication-related support, triaging, and appropriate referrals. However, barriers such as inadequate training, lack of subsidies for psychotropic medications for community pharmacies and poor linkage with health providers and facilities, limit community pharmacists’ involvement in the provision of these services.CAMH service provision by community pharmacists could be facilitated by training, psychotropic medicines subsidy support and enhanced linkage with hospitals while highlighting greater recognition of these services at the community level to support the policy agenda of deinstitutionalizing mental healthcare.
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