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Perspectives of nurses’ role in interprofessional pharmaceutical care across 14 European countries: A qualitative study in pharmacists, physicians and nurses

OBJECTIVES: To understand healthcare professionals’ experiences and perceptions of nurses’ potential or ideal roles in pharmaceutical care (PC). DESIGN: Qualitative study conducted through semi-structured in-depth interviews. SETTING: Between December 2018 and October 2019, interviews were conducted...

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Autores principales: De Baetselier, Elyne, Dilles, Tinne, Batalha, Luis M., Dijkstra, Nienke E., Fernandes, Maria I., Filov, Izabela, Friedrichs, Juliane, Grondahl, Vigdis A., Heczkova, Jana, Helgesen, Ann Karin, Jordan, Sue, Keeley, Sarah, Klatt, Thomas, Kolovos, Petros, Kulirova, Veronika, Ličen, Sabina, Lillo-Crespo, Manuel, Malara, Alba, Padysakova, Hana, Prosen, Mirko, Pusztai, Dorina, Riquelme-Galindo, Jorge, Rottkova, Jana, Sino, Carolien G., Talarico, Francesco, Tziaferi, Styliani, Van Rompaey, Bart
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8158867/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34043650
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0251982
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author De Baetselier, Elyne
Dilles, Tinne
Batalha, Luis M.
Dijkstra, Nienke E.
Fernandes, Maria I.
Filov, Izabela
Friedrichs, Juliane
Grondahl, Vigdis A.
Heczkova, Jana
Helgesen, Ann Karin
Jordan, Sue
Keeley, Sarah
Klatt, Thomas
Kolovos, Petros
Kulirova, Veronika
Ličen, Sabina
Lillo-Crespo, Manuel
Malara, Alba
Padysakova, Hana
Prosen, Mirko
Pusztai, Dorina
Riquelme-Galindo, Jorge
Rottkova, Jana
Sino, Carolien G.
Talarico, Francesco
Tziaferi, Styliani
Van Rompaey, Bart
author_facet De Baetselier, Elyne
Dilles, Tinne
Batalha, Luis M.
Dijkstra, Nienke E.
Fernandes, Maria I.
Filov, Izabela
Friedrichs, Juliane
Grondahl, Vigdis A.
Heczkova, Jana
Helgesen, Ann Karin
Jordan, Sue
Keeley, Sarah
Klatt, Thomas
Kolovos, Petros
Kulirova, Veronika
Ličen, Sabina
Lillo-Crespo, Manuel
Malara, Alba
Padysakova, Hana
Prosen, Mirko
Pusztai, Dorina
Riquelme-Galindo, Jorge
Rottkova, Jana
Sino, Carolien G.
Talarico, Francesco
Tziaferi, Styliani
Van Rompaey, Bart
author_sort De Baetselier, Elyne
collection PubMed
description OBJECTIVES: To understand healthcare professionals’ experiences and perceptions of nurses’ potential or ideal roles in pharmaceutical care (PC). DESIGN: Qualitative study conducted through semi-structured in-depth interviews. SETTING: Between December 2018 and October 2019, interviews were conducted with healthcare professionals of 14 European countries in four healthcare settings: hospitals, community care, mental health and long-term residential care. PARTICIPANTS: In each country, pharmacists, physicians and nurses in each of the four settings were interviewed. Participants were selected on the basis that they were key informants with broad knowledge and experience of PC. DATA COLLECTION AND ANALYSIS: All interviews were conducted face to face. Each country conducted an initial thematic analysis. Consensus was reached through a face-to-face discussion of all 14 national leads. RESULTS: 340 interviews were completed. Several tasks were described within four potential nursing responsibilities, that came up as the analysis themes, being: 1) monitoring therapeutic/adverse effects of medicines, 2) monitoring medicines adherence, 3) decision making on medicines, including prescribing 4) providing patient education/information. Nurses’ autonomy varied across Europe, from none to limited to a few tasks and emergencies to a broad range of tasks and responsibilities. Intended level of autonomy depended on medicine types and level of education. Some changes are needed before nursing roles can be optimised and implemented in practice. Lack of time, shortage of nurses, absence of legal frameworks and limited education and knowledge are main threats to European nurses actualising their ideal role in PC. CONCLUSIONS: European nurses have an active role in PC. Respondents reported positive impacts on care quality and patient outcomes when nurses assumed PC responsibilities. Healthcare professionals expect nurses to report observations and assessments. This key patient information should be shared and addressed by the interprofessional team. The study evidences the need of a unique and consensus-based PC framework across Europe.
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spelling pubmed-81588672021-06-09 Perspectives of nurses’ role in interprofessional pharmaceutical care across 14 European countries: A qualitative study in pharmacists, physicians and nurses De Baetselier, Elyne Dilles, Tinne Batalha, Luis M. Dijkstra, Nienke E. Fernandes, Maria I. Filov, Izabela Friedrichs, Juliane Grondahl, Vigdis A. Heczkova, Jana Helgesen, Ann Karin Jordan, Sue Keeley, Sarah Klatt, Thomas Kolovos, Petros Kulirova, Veronika Ličen, Sabina Lillo-Crespo, Manuel Malara, Alba Padysakova, Hana Prosen, Mirko Pusztai, Dorina Riquelme-Galindo, Jorge Rottkova, Jana Sino, Carolien G. Talarico, Francesco Tziaferi, Styliani Van Rompaey, Bart PLoS One Research Article OBJECTIVES: To understand healthcare professionals’ experiences and perceptions of nurses’ potential or ideal roles in pharmaceutical care (PC). DESIGN: Qualitative study conducted through semi-structured in-depth interviews. SETTING: Between December 2018 and October 2019, interviews were conducted with healthcare professionals of 14 European countries in four healthcare settings: hospitals, community care, mental health and long-term residential care. PARTICIPANTS: In each country, pharmacists, physicians and nurses in each of the four settings were interviewed. Participants were selected on the basis that they were key informants with broad knowledge and experience of PC. DATA COLLECTION AND ANALYSIS: All interviews were conducted face to face. Each country conducted an initial thematic analysis. Consensus was reached through a face-to-face discussion of all 14 national leads. RESULTS: 340 interviews were completed. Several tasks were described within four potential nursing responsibilities, that came up as the analysis themes, being: 1) monitoring therapeutic/adverse effects of medicines, 2) monitoring medicines adherence, 3) decision making on medicines, including prescribing 4) providing patient education/information. Nurses’ autonomy varied across Europe, from none to limited to a few tasks and emergencies to a broad range of tasks and responsibilities. Intended level of autonomy depended on medicine types and level of education. Some changes are needed before nursing roles can be optimised and implemented in practice. Lack of time, shortage of nurses, absence of legal frameworks and limited education and knowledge are main threats to European nurses actualising their ideal role in PC. CONCLUSIONS: European nurses have an active role in PC. Respondents reported positive impacts on care quality and patient outcomes when nurses assumed PC responsibilities. Healthcare professionals expect nurses to report observations and assessments. This key patient information should be shared and addressed by the interprofessional team. The study evidences the need of a unique and consensus-based PC framework across Europe. Public Library of Science 2021-05-27 /pmc/articles/PMC8158867/ /pubmed/34043650 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0251982 Text en © 2021 De Baetselier et al https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
De Baetselier, Elyne
Dilles, Tinne
Batalha, Luis M.
Dijkstra, Nienke E.
Fernandes, Maria I.
Filov, Izabela
Friedrichs, Juliane
Grondahl, Vigdis A.
Heczkova, Jana
Helgesen, Ann Karin
Jordan, Sue
Keeley, Sarah
Klatt, Thomas
Kolovos, Petros
Kulirova, Veronika
Ličen, Sabina
Lillo-Crespo, Manuel
Malara, Alba
Padysakova, Hana
Prosen, Mirko
Pusztai, Dorina
Riquelme-Galindo, Jorge
Rottkova, Jana
Sino, Carolien G.
Talarico, Francesco
Tziaferi, Styliani
Van Rompaey, Bart
Perspectives of nurses’ role in interprofessional pharmaceutical care across 14 European countries: A qualitative study in pharmacists, physicians and nurses
title Perspectives of nurses’ role in interprofessional pharmaceutical care across 14 European countries: A qualitative study in pharmacists, physicians and nurses
title_full Perspectives of nurses’ role in interprofessional pharmaceutical care across 14 European countries: A qualitative study in pharmacists, physicians and nurses
title_fullStr Perspectives of nurses’ role in interprofessional pharmaceutical care across 14 European countries: A qualitative study in pharmacists, physicians and nurses
title_full_unstemmed Perspectives of nurses’ role in interprofessional pharmaceutical care across 14 European countries: A qualitative study in pharmacists, physicians and nurses
title_short Perspectives of nurses’ role in interprofessional pharmaceutical care across 14 European countries: A qualitative study in pharmacists, physicians and nurses
title_sort perspectives of nurses’ role in interprofessional pharmaceutical care across 14 european countries: a qualitative study in pharmacists, physicians and nurses
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8158867/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34043650
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0251982
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