Nicola Cornwall n.j.cornwall@keele.ac.uk
Acceptability of a proposed practice pharmacist-led review for opioid-treated patients with persistent pain: A qualitative study to inform intervention development
Cornwall, Nicola; Woodcock, Charlotte; Ashworth, Julie; Harrisson, Sarah A; Dikomitis, Lisa; White, Simon; Helliwell, Toby; Hodgson, Eleanor; Knaggs, Roger; Pincus, Tamar; Santer, Miriam; Mallen, Christian D; Jinks, Clare; on behalf of the PROMPPT team
Authors
Dr Charlotte Woodcock c.woodcock@keele.ac.uk
Julie Ashworth j.ashworth@keele.ac.uk
Sarah Harrisson s.a.harrisson@keele.ac.uk
Lisa Dikomitis
Simon White s.j.white@keele.ac.uk
Toby Helliwell t.helliwell@keele.ac.uk
Eleanor Hodgson
Roger Knaggs
Tamar Pincus
Miriam Santer
Christian Mallen c.d.mallen@keele.ac.uk
Clare Jinks c.jinks@keele.ac.uk
on behalf of the PROMPPT team
Abstract
Introduction
Regular review of patients prescribed opioids for persistent non-cancer pain (PCNP) is recommended but not routinely undertaken. The PROMPPT (Proactive clinical Review of patients taking Opioid Medicines long-term for persistent Pain led by clinical Pharmacists in primary care Teams) research programme aims to develop and test a pharmacist-led pain review (PROMPPT) to reduce inappropriate opioid use for persistent pain in primary care. This study explored the acceptability of the proposed PROMPPT review to inform early intervention development.
Methods
Interviews (n = 15) and an online discussion forum (n = 31) with patients prescribed opioids for PCNP and interviews with pharmacists (n = 13), explored acceptability of a proposed PROMPPT review. A prototype PROMPPT review was then tested and refined through 3 iterative cycles of in-practice testing (IPT) (n = 3 practices, n = 3 practice pharmacists, n = 13 patients). Drawing on the Theoretical Framework of Acceptability (TFA), a framework was generated (including a priori TFA constructs) allowing for deductive and inductive thematic analysis to identify aspects of prospective and experienced acceptability.
Results
Patients felt uncertain about practice pharmacists delivering the proposed PROMPPT review leading to development of content for the invitation letter for IPT (introducing the pharmacist and outlining the aim of the review). After IPT, patients felt that pharmacists were suited to the role as they were knowledgeable and qualified. Pharmacists felt that the proposed reviews would be challenging. Although challenges were experienced during delivery of PROMPPT reviews, pharmacists found that they became easier to deliver with time, practise and experience. Recommendations for optimisations after IPT included development of the training to include examples of challenging consultations.
Conclusions
Uptake of new healthcare interventions is influenced by perceptions of acceptability. Exploring prospective and experienced acceptability at multiple time points during early intervention development, led to mini-optimisations of the prototype PROMPPT review ahead of a non-randomised feasibility study.
Citation
Cornwall, N., Woodcock, C., Ashworth, J., Harrisson, S. A., Dikomitis, L., White, S., …on behalf of the PROMPPT team. (2023). Acceptability of a proposed practice pharmacist-led review for opioid-treated patients with persistent pain: A qualitative study to inform intervention development. British Journal of Pain, https://doi.org/10.1177/20494637231221688
Journal Article Type | Article |
---|---|
Acceptance Date | Nov 28, 2023 |
Online Publication Date | Dec 19, 2023 |
Publication Date | Dec 19, 2023 |
Deposit Date | Dec 21, 2023 |
Publicly Available Date | Dec 22, 2023 |
Journal | British Journal of Pain |
Print ISSN | 2049-4637 |
Electronic ISSN | 2049-4645 |
Publisher | SAGE Publications |
Peer Reviewed | Peer Reviewed |
DOI | https://doi.org/10.1177/20494637231221688 |
Keywords | Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine |
Publisher URL | https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/20494637231221688 |
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Publisher Licence URL
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
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