Abstract

BackgroundExpanding access to sterile syringes in rural areas is vital, as injection-related epidemics expand beyond metropolitan areas globally. While pharmacies have potential to be an easily accessible source of sterile syringes, research in cities has identified moral, legal and ethical barriers that preclude over-the-counter (OTC) sales to people who inject drugs (PWID). The current study builds on prior urban-based research by elucidating (1) pharmacy OTC policies and (2) pharmacists’ rationale for, and barriers and facilitators to, OTC syringe sales in a US rural area hard hit by drug-related epidemics.MethodsWe conducted 14 semi-structured interviews with pharmacists recruited from two Eastern Kentucky health districts. Interview domains included experiences with, and attitudes toward, selling OTC syringes to PWID. Constructivist grounded theory methods were used to analyze verbatim transcripts.ResultsMost pharmacists operated “restrictive OTC” pharmacies (n = 8), where patients were required to have a prescription or proof of medical need to purchase a syringe. The remainder (n = 6) operated “open OTC” pharmacies, which allowed OTC syringe sales to most patients. Both groups believed their pharmacy policies protected their community and pharmacy from further drug-related harm, but diverging policies emerged because of stigma toward PWID, perceptions of Kentucky law, and belief OTC syringe sales were harmful rather than protective to the community.ConclusionOur results suggest that restrictive OTC pharmacy policies are rooted in stigmatizing views of PWID. Anti-stigma education about substance use disorder (SUD), human immunodeficiency virus (HIV), and Hepatitis C (HCV) is likely needed to truly shift restrictive pharmacy policy.

Highlights

  • Expanding access to sterile syringes in rural areas is vital as epidemics of injection-related human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) and hepatitis C (HCV) escalateFadanelli et al Harm Reduction Journal (2022) 19:1“overwhelmingly” rural [45]

  • The analysis suggested that the following categories intersected within one another to influence whether pharmacists developed restrictive or open OTC syringe sale policies: “Protection of the community,” “Political environment for OTC syringe sales,” “Collective community trauma.”

  • The core category that arose from our analysis was, “Mitigating drug-related harms or consequences to the community through meso-level pharmacy political on OTC syringe sales,” which intersected all other categories

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Summary

Introduction

Expanding access to sterile syringes in rural areas is vital as epidemics of injection-related human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) and hepatitis C (HCV) escalateFadanelli et al Harm Reduction Journal (2022) 19:1“overwhelmingly” rural [45]. Pharmacies may be valuable sources of sterile syringes in rural areas hard hit by injection-related epidemics. In rural areas that already have syringe service programs (SSPs), pharmacies may be vital complements to these existing programs: while SSPs may have limited operating hours, rural pharmacies may be open for upward of eight hours a day, five days a week [4] These hours may enhance access to sterile syringes among rural PWID who work or have other time constraints that impact attendance, fear attending an SSP [22, 44], or due to local SSP closures [28, 29]. The current study builds on prior urban-based research by elucidating (1) pharmacy OTC policies and (2) pharmacists’ rationale for, and barriers and facilitators to, OTC syringe sales in a US rural area hard hit by drug-related epidemics

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