The impact of a person-centred community pharmacy mental health medication support service on consumer outcomes
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Author(s)
McMillan, Sara S
Kelly, Fiona
Hattingh, H Laetitia
Fowler, Jane L
Mihala, Gabor
Wheeler, Amanda J
Year published
2018
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Background: Mental illness is a worldwide health priority. As medication is commonly used to treat mental illness, community pharmacy staff is well placed to assist consumers.
Aim: To evaluate the effectiveness of a multifaceted, community pharmacy medication support service for mental health consumers.
Method: Pharmacists and pharmacy support staff in three Australian states were trained to deliver a flexible, goal-oriented medication support service for adults with mental illness over 3–6 months. Consumer-related outcome measures included perceptions of illness and health-related quality of life, medication beliefs, ...
View more >Background: Mental illness is a worldwide health priority. As medication is commonly used to treat mental illness, community pharmacy staff is well placed to assist consumers. Aim: To evaluate the effectiveness of a multifaceted, community pharmacy medication support service for mental health consumers. Method: Pharmacists and pharmacy support staff in three Australian states were trained to deliver a flexible, goal-oriented medication support service for adults with mental illness over 3–6 months. Consumer-related outcome measures included perceptions of illness and health-related quality of life, medication beliefs, treatment satisfaction and medication adherence. Results: Fifty-five of 100 trained pharmacies completed the intervention with 295 of the 418 recruited consumers (70.6% completion rate); 51.2% of consumers received two or more follow-ups. Significant improvements were reported by consumers for overall perceptions of illness (p < 0.001), the mental health domain of quality of life (p < 0.001), concerns about medication (p = 0.001) and global satisfaction with medication (p < 0.001). Consumers also reported an increase in medication adherence (p = 0.005). Conclusions: A community pharmacy mental health medication support service that is goal-oriented, flexible and individualised, improved consumer outcomes across various measures. While further research into the cost-effectiveness and sustainability of such a service is warranted, this intervention could easily be adapted to other contexts.
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View more >Background: Mental illness is a worldwide health priority. As medication is commonly used to treat mental illness, community pharmacy staff is well placed to assist consumers. Aim: To evaluate the effectiveness of a multifaceted, community pharmacy medication support service for mental health consumers. Method: Pharmacists and pharmacy support staff in three Australian states were trained to deliver a flexible, goal-oriented medication support service for adults with mental illness over 3–6 months. Consumer-related outcome measures included perceptions of illness and health-related quality of life, medication beliefs, treatment satisfaction and medication adherence. Results: Fifty-five of 100 trained pharmacies completed the intervention with 295 of the 418 recruited consumers (70.6% completion rate); 51.2% of consumers received two or more follow-ups. Significant improvements were reported by consumers for overall perceptions of illness (p < 0.001), the mental health domain of quality of life (p < 0.001), concerns about medication (p = 0.001) and global satisfaction with medication (p < 0.001). Consumers also reported an increase in medication adherence (p = 0.005). Conclusions: A community pharmacy mental health medication support service that is goal-oriented, flexible and individualised, improved consumer outcomes across various measures. While further research into the cost-effectiveness and sustainability of such a service is warranted, this intervention could easily be adapted to other contexts.
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Journal Title
Journal of Mental Health
Volume
27
Issue
2
Copyright Statement
© 2017 The Author(s). Published by Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group. This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/), which permits noncommercial re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited, and is not altered, transformed, or built upon in any way.
Note
This publication has been entered into Griffith Research Online as an Advanced Online Version.
Subject
Clinical sciences
Clinical pharmacy and pharmacy practice
Psychology
Health services and systems
Clinical and health psychology