Abstract

BackgroundThe role of community pharmacists is changing globally with pharmacists engaging in more clinically-oriented roles, including in mental health care. Pharmacists’ interventions have been shown to improve mental health related outcomes but various barriers can limit pharmacists in their care of patients. We aimed to explore the experiences of people with lived experience of mental illness and addictions in community pharmacies to generate findings to inform practice improvements.MethodsWe used interpretive description methodology with analytic procedures of thematic analysis to explore the experiences of people with lived experience of mental illness and addictions with community pharmacy services. Participants were recruited through multiple mechanisms (e.g., paper and online advertisements), offered honorarium for their time, and given the option of a focus group or interview for participation in our study. Data were gathered during July to September of 2012. Interviews and focus groups were audio-recorded, transcribed verbatim, and analyzed by two researchers.ResultsWe collected approximately nine hours of audio data from 18 individuals in two focus groups (n = 12) and six individual interviews. Fourteen participants were female and the average age was 41 years (range 24 to 57 years). Expectations, decision-making, and supports were identified as central themes underlying the community pharmacy experiences of people with lived experience of mental illness and addictions. Eight subthemes were identified including: relationships with pharmacy staff; patient’s role in the pharmacist-patient relationship; crisis and triage; privacy and confidentiality; time; stigma and judgment; medication-related and other services; and transparency.ConclusionsPeople with lived experience of mental illness and addictions demonstrate a high regard and respect for pharmacist’s knowledge and abilities but hold conservative expectations of pharmacy health services shaped by experience, observations, and assumptions. To some extent, expectation management occurs with the recognition of the demands on pharmacists and constraints inherent to community pharmacy practice. Relationships with pharmacy staff are critical to people with lived experience and influence their decision-making. Research in the area of pharmacists’ roles in crises and triage, especially in the area of suicide assessment and mitigation, is needed urgently.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s12913-016-1817-4) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.

Highlights

  • The role of community pharmacists is changing globally with pharmacists engaging in more clinically-oriented roles, including in mental health care

  • Design We used interpretive description methodology [43], with analytic procedures of thematic analysis [44, 45] to explore the experiences of people with lived experience of mental illness and addictions with community pharmacy services

  • Our intention in studying this phenomenon was pragmatic with the goal of using the findings to inform future intervention development for practice-based improvements in mental health care, which is in keeping with interpretive description [43]

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Summary

Introduction

The role of community pharmacists is changing globally with pharmacists engaging in more clinically-oriented roles, including in mental health care. The enhanced roles for pharmacists in mental health care are increasingly clinically-oriented, collaborative roles, [2] in keeping with current standards of practice, and offer opportunities to improve gaps in the mental health system related to effectiveness, efficiency, and equality of care [3, 4]. Understanding the public and patients’ perspectives on pharmacy services is important, especially with changes in roles, in order to help inform how and under what circumstances pharmacists can efficiently and effectively collaborate in providing services to people with lived experience of mental illness and addictions. Existing research and policy documents indicate positive impacts of pharmacists’ roles in mental health care [1, 10], there are findings of significant barriers (e.g., privacy, stigma, limited staffing) that restrict pharmacists in their care of patients with mental illness and addictions [11,12,13,14,15,16,17,18,19,20,21]

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