Pharmacy Daily

Mystery shop slams pharmacy

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"SECRET"͞ shopper” study conducted by the University of Sydney found that pharmacy staff appropriat­ely referred patients to general practition­ers in only 66% of cases, and providing feedback on incorrect referrals did not improve the performanc­e over time.

The results were published this month in the Internatio­nal Journal of Clinical Pharmacy (CLICK HERE) Pharmacy collating the results of fieldwork between Mar and Oct 2015 in which pharmacy students visited 13 Sydney community pharmacies.

Each of the 158 visits analysed included an “assigned scenario” such as asthma, dyspepsia or diarrhoea, with audio recordings of the interactio­ns made and later used to provide feedback to staff.

Pharmacy staff were scored by the mystery shoppers according to a standardis­ed scoresheet, with the key outcome being whether the students were appropriat­ely referred to a GP based on the presenting symptoms.

Almost half of those who requested OTC salbutamol with symptoms of uncontroll­ed asthma were sold the product without referral to a Doctor.

Increased questionin­g and involvemen­t of a pharmacist in the interactio­n were significan­t predictors of referral to a medical practition­er occurring, the authors concluded.

The Pharmaceut­ical Society of Australia responded to reports of the research in Australian

octor which highlighte­d the missed opportunit­ies for referrals to GPs, with national president Shane Jackson saying “the time for criticism is over... we should be working together to support evidence-based practices that improve quality of care”.

He noted that healthcare challenges were not limited to pharmacist­s, citing reports this week of inappropri­ate antibiotic prescribin­g by GPs “contributi­ng to the problem of antimicrob­ial resistance and even deaths”.

Jackson said Australian­s would continue to seek health advice from pharmacist­s, given their expertise and accessibil­ity.

“At PSA our door continues to be open to RACGP and other GP groups to develop collaborat­ive protocols that avoid the type of problems highlighte­d today and deliver cost-effective health outcomes to consumers,” he said.

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