Logo image
The role of pharmacists in caring for young people with chronic illness
Journal article   Open access   Peer reviewed

The role of pharmacists in caring for young people with chronic illness

Nicola J. Gray, Karen L. Shaw, Felicity Smith, Jonathan Burton, Julie Prescott, Rachel Roberts, David Terry and Janet E. McDonagh
Journal of Adolescent Health, Vol.60(2), pp.219-225
02/2017

Abstract

Chronic disease Pharmacy Adolescent Young adult Transition to adult care Medication therapy management Juvenile arthritis Rheumatology Community pharmacy services Hospital pharmacy service
Purpose To explore the perceived and potential roles of pharmacists in the care of young people aged 10–24 years with chronic illness, through the exemplar of juvenile arthritis, from the perspectives of UK community and hospital pharmacists, health service commissioners, rheumatology health professionals, and lay advocates. Methods A sequential mixed methods study design comprises the following: focus groups with community and hospital pharmacists; telephone interviews with pharmacy and rheumatology stakeholders and commissioners; and multidisciplinary group discussions to prioritize roles generated by the first two qualitative phases. Results The high priority roles for pharmacists, identified by pharmacists and rheumatology staff, were developing generic health care skills among young people; transferring information effectively across care interfaces; building trusting relationships with young people; helping young people to find credible online health information; and the need to develop specialist expertise. Participants identified associated challenges for pharmacists in supporting young people with chronic illness. These challenges included parents collecting prescription refills alone, thus reducing opportunities to engage, and pharmacist isolation from the wider health care team. Conclusions This study has led to the identification of specific enhancements to pharmacy services for young people, which have received the endorsement of a wide range of stakeholders. These suggestions could inform the next steps in developing the contribution of community and hospital pharmacy to support young people with chronic illness in the optimal use of their medication.
pdf
journal of adolescent health 2017.pdfDownloadView
AcceptedCC BY-NC-ND V4.0 Open Access
url
Link to Published VersionView
Published (Version of record)Publisher sites may require subscription to read content

Metrics

2 File views/ downloads
28 Record Views
20 Times Cited - Scopus

Details

Logo image

Usage Policy