AI Article Synopsis

  • The study aimed to explore both individual (attitudes, beliefs) and structural (laws, regulations) factors that influence pharmacists’ decisions regarding selling syringes to injection drug users (IDUs).
  • The research involved qualitative interviews with 20 pharmacists in Atlanta, including some leading professionals in Georgia, to gather insights on their decision-making processes.
  • Findings suggested that pharmacists often rely on personal discretion influenced by their own beliefs and regulatory constraints, and proposed that education and regulatory changes could enhance IDUs' access to sterile syringes for health reasons.

Article Abstract

Objective: To better understand the individual (e.g., attitudes and beliefs) and structural (e.g., laws and regulations) factors that influence and shape pharmacists' decisions about selling syringes to injection drug users (IDUs).

Design: Qualitative research.

Setting: Metropolitan Atlanta. PARICIPANTS: 20 practicing pharmacists who work in or near areas of high drug use in Atlanta, and nine pharmacists who are considered leaders in their profession in Georgia.

Interventions: Semistructured, in-depth interviews.

Main Outcome Measures: Individual and structural factors that influence pharmacists' decisions about selling syringes to IDUs.

Results: Pharmacists reported that they use their professional discretion in making syringe sale decisions and that these decisions are influenced by individuals factors such as their personal attitudes and beliefs about the nature and causes of drug use, and by structural factors such as the Georgia Board of Pharmacy regulation stating that syringes cannot be sold if they will be used for an "unlawful purpose."

Conclusions: IDUs' access to sterile syringes from pharmacies in Atlanta, would likely be increased by (1) providing practicing pharmacists with professional education programs that describe the broad professional support for IDU access to sterile syringes and why blood-borne infection prevention is a legitimate medical purpose for selling syringes and (2) removing or modifying the restrictive Board of Pharmacy regulation governing syringe sales.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1331/1086-5802.42.0.s40.taussigDOI Listing

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