Abstract

BackgroundPharmacists are highly accessible health care professionals and have regular interactions with consumers that suffer acute mental illness. Though pharmacists are trained in psychopharmacology, they lack formal mental health intervention skills. A solution to address this gap is to up-skill pharmacists in mental health first aid (MHFA). ObjectivesThe purpose of this study was to establish the mental health first aid training needs for Australian rural pharmacists in the community setting. In addition, barriers to pharmacists providing MHFA support were ascertained. MethodsThis study was conducted in two parts. First, semi-structured interviews were conducted with eight rural community pharmacists to ascertain enablers and barriers to MHFA training. Second, an online survey was conducted to assess the attitudes of pharmacists to MHFA and their training requirements. Data from the interviews were thematically analyzed. ResultsSix major themes were identified including evolving role of the pharmacist, importance of relationships, complexity of mental health, need for training in MHFA, low confidence and barriers to assisting in acute mental illness. Pharmacists were accepting of the need for MHFA, but expressed concern over their lack of training, time and resources. The survey results also supported these findings. ConclusionsPharmacists supported MHFA training, but expressed difficulties in balancing professional and business responsibilities. Given that pharmacists are accessible and regularly exposed to mental health, MHFA training should be a core component of pharmacists’ training and their primary health care role. Further research is needed to evaluate the benefits of such training in terms of the consumers’ mental health outcomes.

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