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Swedish community pharmacy employees' knowledge and experience of substandard and falsified medical products : a cross-sectional descriptive survey

Persson, Amelie LU ; Troein, M LU orcid ; Lundin, S LU orcid ; Midlöv, P LU orcid and Lenander, C LU (2022) In International Journal of Pharmacy Practice 30(5). p.414-419
Abstract

OBJECTIVES: Substandard and falsified medical products are, according to the World Health Organization, a global threat to public health. To evaluate if community pharmacy employees can guide the public to safer medication purchases, their knowledge and experience about SF medical products was examined.

METHODS: A digital questionnaire was distributed to the five dominating pharmacy companies in Sweden, representing 97% of the community pharmacies (1391/1433), giving the theoretical possibility of reaching 6200 employees. Three companies published a link to the questionnaire on their intranets, one distributed the link via e-mail to the responsible pharmacist for quality and knowledge, respectively. The fifth company did not pass... (More)

OBJECTIVES: Substandard and falsified medical products are, according to the World Health Organization, a global threat to public health. To evaluate if community pharmacy employees can guide the public to safer medication purchases, their knowledge and experience about SF medical products was examined.

METHODS: A digital questionnaire was distributed to the five dominating pharmacy companies in Sweden, representing 97% of the community pharmacies (1391/1433), giving the theoretical possibility of reaching 6200 employees. Three companies published a link to the questionnaire on their intranets, one distributed the link via e-mail to the responsible pharmacist for quality and knowledge, respectively. The fifth company did not pass on, due to technical problems. Employees aged 18 years or older with customer contact were invited to participate.

KEY FINDINGS: The questionnaire was available for 74% of all community pharmacies (1067/1433), having approximately 4900 employees with customer contact. The response rate was 5% (228/4900). Of the respondents, 89% were pharmacists (203/228), 84% were women (191/228) and 43% were 35-49 years (98/228). The respondents worked in pharmacies of different size, located both in rural and urban areas. The definition of substandard and falsified medical products was known by 182 of the 228 respondents (80%) and the main source of knowledge was media (61%, 111/228). The common European logo for authorized online pharmacies was not recognized by 74% (169/228).

CONCLUSIONS: For pharmacy employees to guide the public to safer medication purchases, knowledge about substandard and falsified medical products needs to be enhanced specially about legal international e-commerce.

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Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
; ; ; and
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
in
International Journal of Pharmacy Practice
volume
30
issue
5
pages
6 pages
publisher
Oxford University Press
external identifiers
  • scopus:85141890719
  • pmid:35849136
ISSN
2042-7174
DOI
10.1093/ijpp/riac059
project
Substandard and falsified medical products, a threat to public health. A study of counselling in the first line of care.
Falsified Medicines. What the public says and professionals know – knowledge exchange providing a basis for actions.
language
English
LU publication?
yes
additional info
© The Author(s) 2022. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Royal Pharmaceutical Society.
id
e38aee77-9f58-4e57-8a28-52eddce11871
date added to LUP
2022-07-22 06:41:11
date last changed
2024-04-04 10:41:51
@article{e38aee77-9f58-4e57-8a28-52eddce11871,
  abstract     = {{<p>OBJECTIVES: Substandard and falsified medical products are, according to the World Health Organization, a global threat to public health. To evaluate if community pharmacy employees can guide the public to safer medication purchases, their knowledge and experience about SF medical products was examined.</p><p>METHODS: A digital questionnaire was distributed to the five dominating pharmacy companies in Sweden, representing 97% of the community pharmacies (1391/1433), giving the theoretical possibility of reaching 6200 employees. Three companies published a link to the questionnaire on their intranets, one distributed the link via e-mail to the responsible pharmacist for quality and knowledge, respectively. The fifth company did not pass on, due to technical problems. Employees aged 18 years or older with customer contact were invited to participate.</p><p>KEY FINDINGS: The questionnaire was available for 74% of all community pharmacies (1067/1433), having approximately 4900 employees with customer contact. The response rate was 5% (228/4900). Of the respondents, 89% were pharmacists (203/228), 84% were women (191/228) and 43% were 35-49 years (98/228). The respondents worked in pharmacies of different size, located both in rural and urban areas. The definition of substandard and falsified medical products was known by 182 of the 228 respondents (80%) and the main source of knowledge was media (61%, 111/228). The common European logo for authorized online pharmacies was not recognized by 74% (169/228).</p><p>CONCLUSIONS: For pharmacy employees to guide the public to safer medication purchases, knowledge about substandard and falsified medical products needs to be enhanced specially about legal international e-commerce.</p>}},
  author       = {{Persson, Amelie and Troein, M and Lundin, S and Midlöv, P and Lenander, C}},
  issn         = {{2042-7174}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  number       = {{5}},
  pages        = {{414--419}},
  publisher    = {{Oxford University Press}},
  series       = {{International Journal of Pharmacy Practice}},
  title        = {{Swedish community pharmacy employees' knowledge and experience of substandard and falsified medical products : a cross-sectional descriptive survey}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ijpp/riac059}},
  doi          = {{10.1093/ijpp/riac059}},
  volume       = {{30}},
  year         = {{2022}},
}