Assessing the contribution of prescribing in primary care by nurses and professionals allied to medicine: a systematic review of literature
- PMID: 22136294
- PMCID: PMC3248914
- DOI: 10.1186/1472-6963-11-330
Assessing the contribution of prescribing in primary care by nurses and professionals allied to medicine: a systematic review of literature
Abstract
Background: Safe and timely access to effective and appropriate medication through primary care settings is a major concern for all countries addressing both acute and chronic disease burdens. Legislation for nurses and other professionals allied to medicine to prescribe exists in a minority of countries, with more considering introducing legislation. Although there is variation in the range of medicines permitted to be prescribed, questions remain as to the contribution prescribing by nurses and professionals allied to medicine makes to the care of patients in primary care and what is the evidence on which clinicians, commissioners of services and policy makers can consider this innovation.
Methods: A integrative review of literature on non-medical prescribing in primary care was undertaken guided by dimensions of health care quality: effectiveness, acceptability, efficiency and access.
Results: 19 papers of 17 empirical studies were identified which provided evidence of patient outcome of non medical prescribing in primary care settings. The majority were undertaken in the UK with only one each from the USA, Canada, Botswana and Zimbabwe. Only two studies investigated clinical outcomes of non-medical prescribing. Seven papers reported on qualitative designs and four of these had fewer than ten participants. Most studies reported that non medical prescribing was widely accepted and viewed positively by patients and professionals.
Conclusions: Primary health care is the setting where timely access to safe and appropriate medicines is most critical for the well-being of any population. The gradual growth over time of legislative authority and in the numbers of non-medical prescribers, particularly nurses, in some countries suggests that the acceptability of non-medical prescribing is based on the perceived value to the health care system as a whole. Our review suggests that there are substantial gaps in the knowledge base to help evidence based policy making in this arena. We suggest that future studies of non-medical prescribing in primary care focus on the broad range of patient and health service outcomes and include economic dimensions.
Figures
References
-
- World Health Organisation. The world medicines situations. Geneva:World Health Organisation; 2004.
-
- Rägo L, Santoso B. In: Drug Benefits and Risks: International Textbook of Clinical Pharmacology, revised 2nd edition. van Boxtel CJ, Santoso B, Edwards IR, editor. IOS Press and Uppsala Monitoring Centre; 2008. Drug Regulation: History, Present and Future.
-
- NC Drennan J, Allen D, Hyde A, Felle P, O'Boyle K, Treacy P, Butler M. Independent Evaluation of the Nurse and Midwife Prescribing Initiative. Dublin: University College Dublin; 2009.
-
- International Council of Nurses. Trends and issues in nursing: Implementing Nurse Prescribing. Geneva: International Council of Nursing; 2009.
Publication types
MeSH terms
LinkOut - more resources
Full Text Sources
