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Effectiveness of an intervention to increase the knowledge, attitude, and practice regarding the return and disposal of unused medications

Pauline Siew Mei Lai, Kit Mun Tan, Hong Gee Lee, Yin Yen Wong, Nur Azrida Azhari Wasi, Si Mui Sim

2021Malaysian Family Physician13 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

This study aimed to evaluate the effectiveness of an educational intervention (Safe D.U.M.P) to improve the knowledge, attitude, and practice regarding the return and disposal of unused medications. Community-dwelling adults in Malaysia who could understand English were recruited from two healthcare events. Participants were asked to fill out the validated Return and Disposal of Unused Medications (ReDiUM) questionnaire (pre-intervention), view six educational intervention posters on how to dispose of unused medications (Safe D.U.M.P), then answer the ReDiUM questionnaire immediately after viewing the posters (post-intervention). A total of 390 out of 456 participants participated (response rate=85.5%). Most were female (71%) with a median age of 42 years. The overall knowledge of participants significantly increased from 60% to 80% (p<0.001). However, no improvement was seen regarding their overall attitude and practice. This outcome was as expected as it may be more difficult to improve attitude and practice (when compared to knowledge) with a single educational session.

Topics & Concepts

Dispose patternIntervention (counseling)MedicineFamily medicineSession (web analytics)NursingAdvertisingComputer scienceBusinessProgramming languageAntibiotic Use and ResistancePharmaceutical Practices and Patient OutcomesChild Nutrition and Water Access
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