2 research outputs found
Household medication safety practices during the COVID-19 pandemic: a descriptive qualitative study protocol
Introduction Those who are staying at home and
reducing contact with other people during the COVID-19
pandemic are likely to be at greater risk of medicationrelated problems than the general population. This study
aims to explore household medication practices by and for
this population, identify practices that benefit or jeopardise
medication safety and develop best practice guidance
about household medication safety practices during a
pandemic, grounded in individual experiences.
Methods and analysis This is a descriptive qualitative
study using semistructured interviews, by telephone
or video call. People who have been advised to
‘cocoon’/‘shield’ and/or are aged 70 years or over
and using at least one long-term medication, or their
caregivers, will be eligible for inclusion. We will recruit 100
patient/carer participants: 50 from the UK and 50 from
Ireland. Recruitment will be supported by our patient and
public involvement (PPI) partners, personal networks and
social media. Individual participant consent will be sought,
and interviews audio/video recorded and/or detailed
notes made. A constructivist interpretivist approach to
data analysis will involve use of the constant comparative
method to organise the data, along with inductive analysis.
From this, we will iteratively develop best practice
guidance about household medication safety practices
during a pandemic from the patient’s/carer’s perspective.
Ethics and dissemination This study has Trinity College
Dublin, University of Limerick and University College
London ethics approvals. We plan to disseminate our
findings via presentations at relevant patient/public,
professional, academic and scientific meetings, and for
publication in peer-reviewed journals. We will create a list
of helpful strategies that participants have reported and
share this with participants, PPI partners and on social
media
Medicines management at home during the COVID-19 pandemic: a qualitative study exploring the UK patient/carer perspective
Objectives To explore home medicine practices and safety for people shielding and/or over the age of 70 during the COVID-19 pandemic and to create guidance, from the patient/carer perspective, for enabling safe medicine practices for this population. Methods Semi-structured interviews were carried out with 50 UK participants who were shielding and/or over the age of 70 and who used medicines for a long-term condition, using telephone or video conferencing. Participants were recruited through personal/professional networks and through patient/carer organisations. Participants were asked about their experiences of managing medicines during the pandemic and how this differed from previous practices. Data were analysed using inductive thematic analysis. Key findings Patients’ and their families’ experiences of managing medicines safely during the pandemic varied greatly. Analysis suggests that this was based on the patient’s own agency, the functioning of their medicines system pre-pandemic and their relationships with family, friends, community networks and pharmacy staff. Medicine safety issues reported included omitted doses and less-effective formulations being used. Participants also described experiencing high levels of anxiety related to obtaining medicines, monitoring medicines and feeling at risk of contracting COVID-19 while accessing healthcare services for medicine-related issues. Effects of the pandemic
on medicines adherence were reported to be positive by some and negative by others.
Conclusions Pharmacy staff have a key role to play by establishing good relationships with patients and their families, working with prescribers to ensure medicines systems are as joined up as possible, and signposting to community networks that can help with medicines collection