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Examining the Relationship Between Demographics and the Attitudes of Arizona Pharmacists Regarding the Provision of Smoking Cessation ServicesSchisler, Rick, Boardman, Daniel January 2007 (has links)
Class of 2007 Abstract / Objectives: The purpose of this study was to examine the relationship between the demographics and attitudes of Arizona pharmacists regarding provision of smoking cessation services.
Methods: Paper-based surveys were distributed to pharmacists attending the 2006 Arizona Pharmacy Alliance (AzPA) Annual Meeting in Tucson, Arizona. The instrument allowed collection of 12 demographic points from subjects for data cross-sectioning. Opinions of the pharmacists were collected for 35 statements of agreement level on a four-point Likert-type response scale. Association between the demographic and opinion variables was analyzed using either Kruskal-Wallis’ rank-sum or Spearman's correlation tests.
Results: Of 350 surveys distributed, 78 subjects returned them and 63 (18%) met inclusion criteria. Respondents agreed to all barriers of smoking cessation, particularly lacks in time (82.5%), patient demand (79.7%), smoking cessation program availability (68%), and documentation system (56.6%). Participants’ demographics including age, gender, practice setting and position, time since completion of education, specific smoking cessation education received, time spent counseling a patient, and number of general and smoking cessation counsels were significantly associated with pharmacists’ perceived demand and resource barriers to provision of smoking cessation services, faith in a patient’s ability to quit or try, self-perception as a valuable and effective resource, comfort level approaching patients regarding smoking cessation, likelihood of intervention, and feelings of reward (all p-values < 0.05).
Conclusions: This study identified several associations between pharmacists’ demographics and their thoughts towards provision of smoking cessation services, though causation is undetermined.
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Exploring medication safety with a restorative approachDomm, Elizabeth Lenore 06 1900 (has links)
Medication safety is a key contribution to patient safety in health care settings. Health care researchers and scholars frequently report and discuss nurses medication administration practices or medication errors associated with patients safety in hospitals. Yet there are gaps in published reports about how practitioners view the larger phenomenon of medication safety as it unfolds on a hospital unit. Research is needed to advance our understanding of medication safety as it comes together amidst the interrelated elements in a complex hospital environment, and what practitioners identify and associate with medication safety in this context.
In this study, medication safety was explored with participants from nursing and pharmacy departments on one Canadian hospital unit. Using a restorative theoretical approach and citizen science methodology, the researcher engaged in critical conversations with practitioner and decision-maker participants (n=68) to explore elements that support and those that present barriers to medication safety through focus groups, photo walkabouts, on-unit observations, and photo elicitation. Themes from the data revealed that (1) unit structures shape medication safety, (2) medication system design affects medication safety, (3) practitioners embed accountability for medication safety into their practice and processes, (4) unit culture influences medication safety, (5) practitioners devise and employ workarounds to circumvent ongoing barriers to medication safety, and (6) participants envisioned, and in some cases implemented, restorations to improve medication safety on their unit. Findings highlight a range of contextual, interrelated supports for and barriers to medication safety that participants discovered and shared knowledge about on their unit. Participants envisioned medication safety improvements that could be implemented at present and in the future. Workarounds, power, and possibilities for medication safety improvements related to current medication system design in health care systems are discussed.
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Entrepreneurial Potential : Measuring the entrepreneurial potential among pharmacists in JönköpingSalmela, Markus, Eliasson, Niklas, Almqvist, Nathalie January 2008 (has links)
Investigation of the entrepreneurial potential of the pharmacists of Jönköping. A quantitative case study.
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Canadian Pharmacists and Natural Health Products: Identifying Professional ResponsibilitiesShanthakumar, Narmatha 15 February 2010 (has links)
Natural health products (NHPs) are increasingly sold in pharmacies. The purpose of this study was to determine Canadian pharmacists’ attitudes about their professional responsibilities regarding natural health products. A cross-sectional, random sample survey design was used: 3356 questionnaires were mailed to a random sample of licensed pharmacists in all provinces/territories in Canada (except Nunavut). Survey responses were evaluated using descriptive statistics and logistic regression analyses. Response rate was 61%. Overall, respondents were most likely to endorse pharmacist responsibilities related to vitamins and minerals, followed by herbal medicines, then homeopathic medicines. Responsibilities regarding knowledge of NHPs and counseling on NHPs were more frequently endorsed than responsibilities associated with NHP-related documentation. Self-reported knowledge was positively associated with endorsement of NHP-related responsibilities for all NHP types.
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Canadian Pharmacists and Natural Health Products: Identifying Professional ResponsibilitiesShanthakumar, Narmatha 15 February 2010 (has links)
Natural health products (NHPs) are increasingly sold in pharmacies. The purpose of this study was to determine Canadian pharmacists’ attitudes about their professional responsibilities regarding natural health products. A cross-sectional, random sample survey design was used: 3356 questionnaires were mailed to a random sample of licensed pharmacists in all provinces/territories in Canada (except Nunavut). Survey responses were evaluated using descriptive statistics and logistic regression analyses. Response rate was 61%. Overall, respondents were most likely to endorse pharmacist responsibilities related to vitamins and minerals, followed by herbal medicines, then homeopathic medicines. Responsibilities regarding knowledge of NHPs and counseling on NHPs were more frequently endorsed than responsibilities associated with NHP-related documentation. Self-reported knowledge was positively associated with endorsement of NHP-related responsibilities for all NHP types.
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Entrepreneurial Potential : Measuring the entrepreneurial potential among pharmacists in JönköpingSalmela, Markus, Eliasson, Niklas, Almqvist, Nathalie January 2008 (has links)
<p>Investigation of the entrepreneurial potential of the pharmacists of Jönköping. A quantitative case study.</p>
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An exploratory study of consumer, community pharmacist, and physician attitudes and comprehension of direct-to-consumer prescription drug advertising /Stavchansky, Liza E., January 2000 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Texas at Austin, 2000. / Vita. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 223-238). Available also in a digital version from Dissertation Abstracts.
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Using the theory of planned behavior to predict Texas community pharmacists' willingness to provide sterile syringes to known or suspected intravenous drug usersMashburn, Jay Hacker 28 August 2008 (has links)
Not available / text
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Job satisfaction among hospital pharmacists and support personnelNoel, Michael Wayne January 1979 (has links)
No description available.
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Studies of the effect of a therapeutics advisory service in primary careWood, Kay Michele Georgina January 1999 (has links)
No description available.
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