Background: Undervaccination is a public health issue that disproportionately affects underserved populations. Pharmacists are accessible health care professionals who have the potential to better reach communities. The aim of this study is to understand how organizational obstacles influence the pharmacist's ability to meet underserved clients' vaccination needs in community pharmacy.

Methods: We conducted semi-structured interviews with key stakeholders in Quebec. Results were codified according to domains of the Consolidated Framework for Implementation Research.

Results: Fourteen interviews were carried out with representatives from pharmacy associations, pharmacy chains and banners, integrated health and social service centres, and local Quebec Public Health departments. Barriers to promoting vaccination were identified in four areas: 1) vaccine service logistics, 2) the pharmacy setting, 3) external influences and 4) pharmacist's knowledge and beliefs.

Discussion: Technological tools accessible to pharmacists are sufficient but not user-friendly due to the lack of integration between the pharmacy software, the vaccine registry and the provincial appointment system. Technology limits access to vaccination for certain underserved populations. Moreover, the incentives linked to vaccination do not favour the vaccination of difficult-to-reach clients and they limit pharmacists' ability to be proactive with vaccine recommendations. Pharmacists are more inclined to participate in mass vaccination campaigns, and delegating vaccine administration to nurses and technicians allows pharmacies to financially break even. Certain services such as travel health vaccination require an extended set of knowledge, which creates resistance for some pharmacists to integrate the role.

Conclusion: Pharmacists are well-placed to improve vaccination uptake, but several technological and organizational barriers limit their ability to provide vaccination services and reach underserved communities. A better alignment between incentives and proactive promotion should be put forward to encourage pharmacists to actively identify and reach underserved populations.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11556574PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/17151635241269988DOI Listing

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