Litcius/Paper detail

General practitioners’ perceptions of the roles of community pharmacists and their willingness to collaborate with pharmacists in primary care

Joy Boon Ka Chong, Clivia Yao Hua Yap, Shawn Lien Ler Tan, Xuan Rong Thong, Fang Yang, Helen Smith

2023Journal of Pharmaceutical Policy and Practice13 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Community pharmacists (CPs) have the capacity to contribute to patient care given their expertise in medication and accessibility to residents in the community. However, multidisciplinary patient care programmes where CPs collaborate with general practitioners (GPs) in patient care is rare in Singapore despite increasing healthcare demand. OBJECTIVES: This study explores GPs' perceptions of CPs' current roles and GPs' ideas for and attitudes towards interprofessional collaboration. METHODS: Semi-structured qualitative interviews were conducted with 20 private GPs from August to December 2020 via an online video-chat platform. GPs were recruited from the Primacy Care Research Network (pcRn), primary care networks, and using snowballing strategies. All interviews were recorded, transcribed and coded thematically. RESULTS: Current working relationships between GPs and CPs appeared amicable but limited. GPs appreciate the existing roles of CPs: dispensing drugs not stocked in their practices and clarifying prescription details. Still, GPs appeared to rarely consider collaborative working. GPs acknowledged that CPs could enhance patient care with initiatives including medication reconciliation and advising on using medical devices. It was suggested that CPs could coordinate the purchase of drugs for primary care networks to improve GPs' inventory management, but less enthusiasm was expressed for clinical collaborations with CPs. Major concerns about GP-CP clinical collaborations included direct competition with GPs' own business interests, perceived low acceptability of pharmacy-led services by patients (citing extra time and cost), threat to continuity of care and the absence of a shared patient electronic health record system. Current funding mechanisms do not enable reimbursement of clinical services provided by CPs. Adoption of telemedicine technologies and governmental financial support were identified as possible enablers of GP-CP collaboration. CONCLUSIONS: GPs saw potential in CPs' increased involvement in patient care, but perceived multiple barriers. Strategies focusing on overcoming these barriers could enable GP-CP collaboration to enhance patient care.

Topics & Concepts

Global Positioning SystemReimbursementEnthusiasmPharmacyMedical prescriptionNursingMedicineHealth careMultidisciplinary approachFamily medicinePsychologyComputer sciencePolitical scienceTelecommunicationsLawSocial psychologyPharmaceutical Practices and Patient OutcomesInterprofessional Education and CollaborationAntibiotic Use and Resistance