A cross-sectional survey of the pharmacy workforce in general practice in Scotland

Derek Stewart* (Corresponding Author), Katie MacLure, Rosemary Newham, Kathrine Gibson-Smith, Rachel Bruce, Scott Cunningham, Andrew Maclure, Sarah Fry, James MacKerrow, Marion Bennie

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

23 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract


Background
In Scotland, there has been significant investment in pharmacy teams in general medical practices over recent years, aligned to current government policy.

Objectives
To characterize the national pharmacy workforce including activities undertaken, perceived competence and confidence, as well as perception of integration of the intervention.

Methods
A cross-sectional survey of all pharmacists and pharmacy technicians in general practices. Survey items were demographics, activities undertaken and experiences. The NoMAD tool (Improving the Normalization of Complex Interventions) was included as a measure of perspectives of implementation. Post-piloting, a questionnaire link was sent to all pharmacists (n = 471) and pharmacy technicians (n = 112). A total NoMAD score was obtained by assigning 1 (strongly disagree) to 5 (strongly agree) to each item.

Results
Responses were received from 393 (83.4%) pharmacists and 101 (91.8%) pharmacy technicians. Three quarters of pharmacists (74.6%) and pharmacy technicians (73.3%) had been qualified for over 10 years. Two-thirds of pharmacists (68.4%) were independent prescribers, with three quarters (72.3%) currently prescribing. Respondents worked in a median of two practices and were providing a range of activities including medication/polypharmacy reviews, medicines reconciliation, prescribing efficiencies and training. Respondents reported high levels of competence and confidence (median 8, scale 0–10 highest). Median NoMAD total score (scale 20–100 highest, Cronbach’s alpha 0.89) was 80 for pharmacists and 75 for pharmacy technicians, P ≤ 0.001.

Conclusions
The general practice pharmacy workforce in Scotland is experienced, well-qualified and integrated within general practices, delivering a range of activities. These findings have implications for workforce planning and future education and training.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)206-212
Number of pages7
JournalFamily Practice
Volume37
Issue number2
Early online date19 Sept 2019
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Apr 2020

Bibliographical note

Acknowledgements
The authors acknowledge the contribution of all study respondents and those
involved in questionnaire development.

Keywords

  • evaluation studies
  • general practice
  • multimorbidity
  • pharmacy
  • Scotland
  • surveys and questionnaires
  • Evaluation studies
  • HEALTH-CARE
  • FUTURE
  • MULTIMORBIDITY

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