Background: Even though patient engagement in the pharmacy encounter is low, few studies focus on activating patients. A Question Prompt List (QPL) has been used successfully in other parts of healthcare to encourage patients to raise their questions and concerns. For a QPL to be useful in a pharmacy setting, it first must be considered valuable and be accepted by pharmacists.
Objective: To investigate the experience of community pharmacists using a QPL in counseling patients about prescribed medications.
Methods: An explorative, qualitative study was conducted in 2020. A QPL, for use in pharmacy counseling, was developed based on previous literature. Semi-structured interviews were held with pharmacists. A thematic analysis approach was conducted, and the analytical framework Technology Acceptance Model (TAM) was used.
Results: Data were collected in 7 Swedish community pharmacies in interviews with 29 purposefully selected pharmacists. Three themes were identified: Perceived usefulness: the impact of the QPL on patient activation in the encounter, Perceived ease of use of the QPL in pharmacies, and Increasing the perceived usefulness and ease of use of the QPL. The pharmacists perceived patients as more active in the meeting when using the QPL. The list focused the conversation on medications, which the pharmacists appreciated from a professional point of view. They described the QPL as a useful tool that could easily be integrated into the dispensing process and required little training; however, challenges described were, for example, time constraints and stress.
Conclusions: Pharmacists reported that using a QPL improved patient participation in the encounter. Encouraging counseling on medications was seen as beneficial from a professional point of view. In the early adoption phase, the QPL was easy to implement and did not increase the pharmacists' workload. A QPL appears to be a promising tool for pharmacists to improve the quality of the consultation experience.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.sapharm.2022.07.011 | DOI Listing |
Nanophotonics
May 2024
Department of Chemistry, University of California, Irvine, Irvine, CA, USA.
Nanostructured plasmonic surfaces allow for precise tailoring of electromagnetic modes within sub-diffraction mode volumes, boosting light-matter interactions. This study explores vibrational strong coupling (VSC) between molecular ensembles and subradiant "dark" cavities that support infrared quadrupolar plasmonic resonances (QPLs). The QPL mode exhibits a dispersion characteristic of bound states in the continuum (BIC).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRes Social Adm Pharm
February 2025
Medicine use & Pharmaceutical policy, School of Public Health and Community Medicine, Sahlgrenska Academy, University of Gothenburg, Box 453, 40530, Gothenburg, Sweden. Electronic address:
Background: The incorporation of Question Prompt Lists (QPLs) into pharmacy interactions has been tested as an innovative strategy aimed at enhancing patient engagement and addressing personal information needs. However, there is a gap in understanding regarding how QPLs induce or reduce patient activation and contribute to improved medical treatment. The specific aim of the study was therefore to qualitatively describe how pharmacy encounters in which QPL are introduced unfold, in order to identify and discuss relevant interactional mechanisms that induce or reduce patient activation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHealth Expect
December 2024
Toronto General Hospital Research Institute, University Health Network, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
Introduction: The aim of this study was to pilot test a question prompt list (QPL) about cardiovascular disease (CVD) risk reduction after hypertensive pregnancy (HDP).
Methods: In a prospective cohort study of adult women who had HDP given the QPL before and surveyed after a physician visit, we assessed perceived person-centred care, self-efficacy for self-management, perceived self-management and QPL feasibility.
Results: Twenty-three women participated: 57% of diverse ethno-cultural groups, 65% < 40 years of age and 48% immigrants.
J Clin Gastroenterol
September 2024
Department of Medicine-Gastroenterology/Hepatology, Stanford University School of Medicine, Redwood City, CA.
Background: Question prompt lists (QPLs) are structured sets of disease-specific questions intended to encourage question-asking by patients and enhance patient-physician communication. To date, an EoE-specific QPL has not been developed for EoE patients.
Aim: To develop a preliminary QPL specific to adults with EoE by incorporating input from international esophageal experts.
Sci Rep
September 2024
School of Computer Science and Technology, North University of China, Taiyuan, 030051, China.
Transformer-based methods effectively capture global dependencies in images, demonstrating outstanding performance in multiple visual tasks. However, existing Transformers cannot effectively denoise large noisy images captured under low-light conditions owing to (1) the global self-attention mechanism causing high computational complexity in the spatial dimension owing to a quadratic increase in computation with the number of tokens; (2) the channel-wise self-attention computation unable to optimise the spatial correlations in images. We propose a local-global interaction Transformer (LGIT) that employs an adaptive strategy to select relevant patches for global interaction, achieving low computational complexity in global self-attention computation.
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