Integration of pharmaceutical care in rural public health : a case study in Ugu and Umzinyathi districts in KwaZulu-Natal
Date
2019-06
Authors
Pillay, Naleeni
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Abstract
South Africa’s Healthcare system being in transitional phase presented opportunity for
pharmaceutical service development within the public sector, however, strong leadership with
visionary advocacy and stewardship is indispensable. The National Health Insurance (NHI)
mandate and the growing emphasis on primary healthcare (PHC) re-engineering, further
strengthens the prominence of many healthcare professionals and processes towards equitable
and quality healthcare service delivery, among them pharmaceutical services. This research
sought to identify the gap in the provision of pharmaceutical care services within the rural public
context.
There are several reasons why an investigation into the role of the pharmacist in PHC facilities
is warranted. Firstly, several pharmaceutical processes within the public sector have and are
contributing to a void in the pharmacist primary role and responsibility, thereby promoting their
expansion into PHC, which at present is limited. Secondly, the growing incidence of
communicable and non-communicable diseases (NCDs) by the lack of clinical governance
questions the quality of patient-centred care and outcomes. Thirdly, the absence of antibiotic
and anti-retroviral clinical stewardship and the World Health Organization calling for professional
collaboration in managing NCDs highlights the need for pharmaceutical care (PhC) intergration.
Therefore, the study focus aimed to guide the development of a collaborative pharmaceutical
care model, within the rural domain, by applying a mixed methodology to describe the roles and
responsibilities of the Primary Care Drug Therapy (PCDT) pharmacist; identifying enabling and
disenabling factors to consider in developing a collaborative health care team through the
perceptions of key informants, authorized nurse prescribers, visiting doctors and pharmacists
working at the public primary healthcare clinics, and by conducting the South African Pharmacy
Council (SAPC) legislative assessment of the ‘ideal’ clinics.
The basis of the argument encompassed philosophical perspectives, legislation, role and
collaborative advantage theory including moral theory of Ubuntu and care ethics related to rules
and regulations of pharmaceutical care practice. The study harnessed healthy discussions
among public healthcare professionals. The outcome supported unanimously a need to integrate
pharmaceutical care and that a Pharmacist can add a meaningful role to the delivery of optimal patient care. A role of collaborative practice was preferred, citing conclusively themes of role
clarity, resources & location and drug supply management by 100% of the respondents. An interprofessional team of doctor, authorized nurse prescriber and pharmacist at facility level to
ensure a public health, primary care, clinical patient outcome focus was favoured by 97% of the
respondents. Continued training of nursing staff and pharmacists was advocated by 94% and
62% of respondents respectively. Further themes of patient safety (82%) and quality of care
(76%) were highlighted. The Kruskal Wallis test (p<0.05), illustrated statistically significant
differences for doctors and authorized nurse prescribers in four medication related processes,
diagnosis & prescribing; administration/documentation; education & training and medication
review, with nurses moreover monitoring patient safety. Pharmacists instead placed more
emphasis on monitoring compliance, educating patients about chronic medication, providing
drug information to prescribers and identifying prescribing errors than over prescribing rights.
The barriers identified were transport unavailability for outreach services, language deficiencies,
scarce resource equipment and the shortage of doctors and authorized nurse prescribers.The
pharmacist advocacy in these under-resourced rural communities that was demonstrated
beneficial is one that drives pharmacovigilance in adverse drug reporting, antibiotic stewardship,
clinical governance with continuous prescription audits followed by structured training for PHC
authorized nurse prescribers, patient engagement and interaction to ensure optimal patient
outcomes and safety. The factors to be considered for such an intergration rely on facility
infrastructure, co-location, SAPC legislative compliance standards among them, role clarity
building on relationship and trust, leadership, principles of Ubuntu and care, a culture of
accountability and responsibility, implementation time, and local context.
Encounterted limitations of time, distance and challenging terrain confined the research study to
two rural districts wherein selective sampling further narrowed the clinics to ideal status. Future
action research of a larger sample across more rural health districts and primary healthcare
clinics is hence recommended to validate and expand the findings of the study which commits
to apprise significant role players in Sub-Saharan Africa that may wish to pursue similar practice
within a rural context, in the hope of changing “Africa’s health care landscape”.
Description
Submitted in fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of
Doctor of Philosophy in Management Sciences, Durban University of Technology, Durban, South Africa, 2019.
Keywords
South Africa’s Healthcare system, Pharmaceutical service, National Health Insurance
Citation
DOI
https://doi.org/10.51415/10321/4376