Pharmacy (Aug 2023)

What Are the Drug-Related Problems Still Faced by Patients in Daily Life?—A Qualitative Analysis at the Pharmacy Counter

  • Susanne Kaae,
  • Ulla Hedegaard,
  • Armin Andersen,
  • Ellen Van Loon,
  • Stijn Crutzen,
  • Katka Taxis,
  • Ramune Jacobsen

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/pharmacy11040124
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 4
p. 124

Abstract

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Background: Drug-related problems (DRPs) affect many patients. Many activities in general practice, hospitals, and community pharmacies have been initiated to tackle DRPs. However, recent studies exploring what DRP patients are still facing in their daily lives are scarce. Methods: Danish pharmacy staff registered DRPs in prescription encounters to understand what DRPs patients are still experiencing in daily life. They noted short descriptions of what happened in the encounter that qualified the incident as a DRP. The descriptions were subjected to an inductive content analysis. Results: A wide range of DRPs that impacted patients’ daily lives practically and healthwise were identified. In total, eighteen percent of patients with prescriptions had a DRP. Three overall stages of DRPs were identified: challenges in receiving the medications, not knowing how or why to take the medications, and not experiencing satisfactory effects. Patients were emotionally affected by these problems. Conclusions: DRPs are still widespread in patients’ daily lives and influence their well-being. The identified DRPs illustrated the complexity of obtaining medications to work as intended and demonstrate that health professionals must take even the basics of medication intake much more seriously.

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