Pharmacists' perceptions of a set of pharmaceutical care practice standards
- PMID: 9479404
- DOI: 10.1016/s1086-5802(16)30246-7
Pharmacists' perceptions of a set of pharmaceutical care practice standards
Abstract
Objective: This study assessed pharmacists' perceptions of the feasibility and relevance of a set of community-based pharmaceutical care practice standards.
Design: Practice standards generated in a Delphi study were rated for feasibility of implementation and relevance to improving therapeutic outcomes by a randomized sample of 315 pharmacists on two 7-point Likert-type scales. These ratings were compared with assessments by Delphi panel experts.
Results: Pharmacists judged many of the standards favorably; however, Kruskal-Wallis ANOVA revealed that they were less confident in the standards' feasibility of implementation and relevance to improving patient outcomes than were the Delphi panel experts.
Conclusion: Pharmacists appear ready to accept a majority of the practice standards used in this study. The lower ratings by respondent pharmacists may be indicative of apprehension about embracing a new practice paradigm and a belief that the provision of pharmaceutical care services has a limited impact on therapeutic outcomes.