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Responding to cough presentations: an interview study with Cambodian pharmacies participating in a National Tuberculosis Referral Program. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Asia-Pacific faces high respiratory mortality rates, with pharmacies in Cambodia playing a vital role in referring tuberculosis cases from clients presenting with persistent coughs to public health clinics.
  • A study with 180 pharmacies revealed that 92% of pharmacy staff would refer clients with a cough suspected of tuberculosis, and those who referred were significantly less likely to sell cough medicines or antibiotics.
  • While pharmacy involvement in the Referral Program shows potential for improving clinical care strategies, there’s a need to enhance the clinical skills of all staff members, especially those who don’t refer clients or sell cough-related products.

Article Abstract

Rationale, Aims And Objectives: Asia-Pacific carries a high burden of respiratory-related mortality. Timely referral and detection of tuberculosis cases optimizes patient and public health outcomes. Registered private pharmacies in Cambodia participate in a National Tuberculosis Referral Program to refer clients with cough suggestive of tuberculosis to public sector clinics for diagnosis and care. The objective of this study was to investigate clinical intentions of pharmacy staff when presented with a hypothetical case of a client with prolonged cough suggestive of tuberculosis.

Method: A random sample of 180 pharmacies was selected. Trained interviewers administered a hypothetical case scenario to trained pharmacy staff. Participants provided 'yes'/'no' responses to five clinical actions presented in the scenario. Actions were not mutually exclusive. Data were tabulated and compared using chi-square tests or Fisher's exact tests.

Results: Overall, 156 (92%) participants would have referred the symptomatic client in the case scenario. Participants who would have referred the client were less likely to sell a cough medicine (42% vs. 100%, P < 0.001) and less likely to sell an antibiotic (19% vs. 79%, P < 0.001) than those who would not have referred the client.

Conclusion: Involving pharmacies in a Referral Program may have introduced concepts of appropriate clinical care when responding to clients presenting with cough suggestive of tuberculosis. However, results showed enhancing clinical competence among all referral programme participants particularly among non-referring pharmacies and those making concurrent sales of cough-related products would optimize pharmacy-initiated referral. Further research into actual clinical practices at Referral Program pharmacies would be justified.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/jep.12467DOI Listing

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