Abstract

Pharmaceutical care is a concept which has moved the pharmacy profession from their primary focus on the product to optimising drug therapy for the individual patient. Expanded pharmacy practice beyond pharmaceutical care will further challenge the role perceptions that other health professionals have about pharmacists. Role theory as a philosophical perspective was used to explore rural and remote health professionals’ beliefs on pharmacists expanding their clinical role by conducting twenty-three semi-structured interviews. Five role theory categories described the data, role ambiguity, role conflict, role overload, role identity and role insufficiency. The health professionals interviewed were found to be uncertain about the boundaries between the traditional roles of the pharmacist compared to that of the expanded roles. A perceived lack of accountability by pharmacists was seen as a major contributor to role conflict, which in turn was found to impact the ability of pharmacists and other health professionals to work collaboratively. Perspectives of other health professionals on pharmacists adopting expanded practice models has highlighted significant concerns with role conflict and role identity. Acknowledging and developing clear strategies to address these concerns is essential to ensure that expanded pharmacy practice can be effectively integrated to improve access to health services and thus health outcomes for rural Australians.

Highlights

  • A pharmacist can be defined as a person whose job is to prepare medicines and to sell or supply them to the public in a store or in a hospital [1]

  • The health professionals interviewed were located in Queensland (17), New South Wales (1), Victoria (2), Northern Territory (1) and South Australia (2)

  • Rural pharmacists in Australia are widely recognised as the most accessible healthcare provider with the potential to deliver a much greater role in the health system [8]. This is common across many countries including Canada and New Zealand that share similar rural issues including a lack of access to health professionals working across vast distances and the consequent emergence of health professionals working to their full scope of practice [10]

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Summary

Introduction

A pharmacist can be defined as a person whose job is to prepare medicines and to sell or supply them to the public in a store or in a hospital [1]. This definition, accurate, essentially represents only the supply function performed by pharmacists. During the mid-1960s, pharmacists assumed a more patient-orientated role and the concept of clinical pharmacy developed [2] This signalled the start of a rapid transition period of expansion and integration of professional functions and closer interaction with doctors and other health professionals [2].

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