Self-care and self-medication are commonly the treatments of choice for the management of minor ailments. Minor ailments can be treated through community pharmacy using a Minor Ailment Service (MAS). The INDICA+PRO Impact Study, evaluated the clinical, economic and humanistic impact of a MAS, concluding that community pharmacies could greatly benefit the health system. Thus, the following objectives were defined for the INDICA+PRO implementation study.
The primary objective is to implement a standardised MAS in usual practice in community pharmacy in Spain. The secondary objectives include an evaluation of the clinical and economic outcomes and the role and impact of two different models of change agents. A pragmatic study with an effectiveness-implementation hybrid design type 3 will be undertaken using the Framework for the Implementation of Services in Pharmacy (FISpH). The study will be carried between October 2020 and December 2022. Two type of practice change facilitators FaFa and SEFaFa. Their main function, using the Observe-Plan-Do-Study-Act process, will be to facilitate the implementation through individualised continuous support to providers of the MAS. The depth and breadth of support to pharmacist providers by each type of change agents will vary.
Pharmaceutical Associations (PA) and/or Spanish Society of Community Pharmacy (SEFAC) will invite community pharmacies/pharmacists. Participating pharmacists will need to sign a commitment form. The second study population will consist of patients presenting with minor ailments or requesting a non-prescription medication. Recruitment of patients will be carried out by the pharmacist providers. The inclusion criteria will be: patients or caregivers (aged ≥18 years, or younger if they are accompanied by an adult) presenting with 31 minor ailments, grouped into five categories (respiratory, moderate pain, digestive, dermatological and other) with pre-agreed referral protocols. Other symptoms may be included at the discretion of the pharmacists. The exclusion criteria will be patients who do not provide informed consent.
The patient/pharmacist intervention will consist of a MAS protocol adapted for each symptom. The consultation will be record in an electronic data capture system (SEFAC eXPERT®-) that provides a step-by-step approach with protocols and clinical information embedded.
The FISpH model will be used to guide the implementation of MAS. Two types of change agents, FaFas and SeFaFas, previously trained for 18 hours, will be used to facilitate the implementation. During each of the stages (exploration, preparation, testing and operation, and initial sustainability), strategies will be used by FaFas and SeFaFas to moderate implementation factors. The impact of strategies will be evaluated. Data on pharmacy/pharmacist's provider performance and patient outcomes will be provided to pharmacist, change agents and PA and SEFAC. FaFas and SeFaFas will have a classification system for barriers and facilitators derived from the constructs in the Consolidated Framework for Implementation Research (CFIR). The classification system for implementation strategies consists of an adaptation of the facilitation activities listed by Dogherty et al. These will be documented in an electronic data capture system.
FaFas will train their pharmacists (max. of 25 pharmacies) for 6 hours and subsequently provide at least monthly follow-up.
The research team will provide ongoing feedback and support to the FaFas and SeFaFas through periodically, hold group meetings by video conference between the research group and all the FaFas and SeFaFas. The research group will provide formal reports on the implementation process and patient outcomes. Other forms of communication such as emails, telephone calls or WhatsApp messaging will also be available.
Implementation and patient consultation process and outcome variables will be measured such as reach, fidelity and integration. Outcome service indicators will be clinical, economic and humanistic. A patient follow up will occur at a maximum of 10 days. Continuous variables will be reported using mean and standard deviation, or median and percentiles. Categorical variables will be reported using percentages. T Student's test or the ANOVA test or Kruskal-Wallis. χ2 test, Fisher's exact test or Yate's chi-squared will also be used. To determine the relationship between the dependent and the independent variables, logistic regression models will be performed including the variables with statistical significance in the bivariate model. The level of significance will be set at p <0.05. Machine learning and big data techniques are being considered for predictive modelling.
The research team will only have access to de-identified data of pharmacists and patients. This study protocol has been approved by the Granada Research Ethics Committee on the 5th February 2020.
INDICA+PRO Implementation Programme for the Implementation, Integration and Sustainability of a Standardised Minor Ailment Service in Usual Practice in Community Pharmacy
Background The World Health Organization (WHO) stated in 2009 that self-care is one of the essential components for achieving health objectives, as it directs and improves access to the appropriate level of healthcare system and reduces costs. Self-care and self-medication are commonly the treatments of choice for the management of minor ailments. Encouraging self-care promotes the improvement of the public's knowledge and skills to optimise decision-making related to health. Access to quality information at appropriate levels of health literacy is an essential element in the self-care process; and thus, health professionals, particularly community pharmacists, play a fundamental role.
Minor ailments are defined by Faus-Dáder et al. as "a health problem that is non-serious in nature, self-limited and of short duration, which has no relationship with the clinical manifestations of any other health problems suffered by the patient, or with the effects (desired or not) of any medication taken by the individual. Minor ailments do not require a medical diagnosis and respond to or are alleviated by symptomatic treatments".
Minor ailments can be treated through community pharmacy using a Minor Ailment Service (MAS). In Spain MAS was defined in 2019 by the "Pharmaceutical Care in Community Pharmacy Forum" (PC-CPF) as "the professional pharmaceutical service provided when a patient or caregiver visits a community pharmacy consulting a specific health problem and requesting the most appropriate remedy". PC-CPF includes a patient request for a non-prescription drug as part of a MAS. Responding to symptoms presented by patients and dealing with requests for non-prescription medication account for between 9% and 16% of the activity of community pharmacies. However, these activities are not legally classified as MAS.
A previous phase of the INDICA+PRO program, the INDICA+PRO Impact Study, evaluated for the first time in Spain the clinical, economic and humanistic impact of a MAS, concluding that community pharmacies could greatly benefit the health system through a more efficient treatment of minor ailments. In turn, increasing the accessibility of patients to the healthcare system as well as ensuring its future sustainability. Thus, the following objectives were defined for an implementation study.
Objectives Primary Objective To develop, implement and integrate a standardised MAS in usual practice in community pharmacy in Spain.
Secondary Objectives
Method Research Design A pragmatic study with an effectiveness-implementation hybrid design type 3 using the Framework for the Implementation of Services in Pharmacy (FISpH).
Scope of study The study will be carried out in Spanish community pharmacies. The study will take place between October 2020 and December 2022.
Facilitation process of the MAS Traditional formal training is not an effective way to promote changes in behaviour or professional practice. Therefore, for this study, the ongoing support of Change Agents will be explored. These Change Agents will continuously monitor and assist in resolving barriers that appear during the implementation process and reinforce facilitators. Consequently, this study will evaluate the roles of the different models of Change Agents (FaFas and SeFaFas). FaFas are specifically trained pharmacists that promote change in professional practice and their main function is to intervene and facilitate this change through individualised continuous support and assistance to the pharmacist providers of the MAS. The FaFa is responsible for conducting on-site training and providing feedback and advice to the pharmacists, as well as being available by email, telephone, WhatsApp or video conference. FaFas will be employed by their participating Pharmaceutical Association. A SeFaFa is a "Spanish Society of Community Pharmacy" (SEFAC) member who volunteers to train and monitor participating pharmacies as well as participant in the study. The level of support provided is lower than that of the FaFas. Pharmacist providers can resolve queries with the SEFaFa via email, telephone, WhatsApp or video conference, however SeFaFas will not offer periodic follow-ups nor monthly on-site visits.
Throughout the cyclical, continuous and individualised facilitation process, the Change Agents will interact with their pharmacists and pharmacies to:
Pharmaceutical Association (PA) and/or SEFAC will invite, through a number of channels, community pharmacies/pharmacists in selected study provinces to take part voluntarily. In the provinces where a PA is part of the study, the FaFa will be employed. All pharmacies will be invited by the PA by email. In provinces without a participating PA, a SEFaFa will be selected, and the invitation to participate will be made by SEFAC, also through an emailed invitation.
Pharmacies will have two weeks to decide whether to participate in the study. In provinces with participating PAs that have more than 25 pharmacies accepting the invitation, a random distribution into two groups will occur. The first group will consist of a maximum of 25 pharmacies and will be assigned to a FaFa. The second group will be assigned to a SEFaFa. In provinces with no participating PA, all pharmacies will be assigned to a SEFaFa. A maximum target of 1000 pharmacists have been set due to resource limitations. Only an intervention group will exist Participating pharmacist will need to sign a commitment form to be eligible to participate in the study.
Description of the pharmacist-patient intervention in the Standardised MAS
The patient /pharmacist intervention is described below. The generic MAS protocol was taken from the "Practical Guide for Pharmaceutical Care Services in the Community Pharmacy":
Community pharmacists will carry out the intervention using symptom specific protocols that were previously agreed with primary care physicians. These protocols will include information on the minor ailment, referral criteria, prevention measures and possible treatments (both pharmacological and non-pharmacological). These symptom specific protocols are included in the SEFAC eXPERT® IT system.
Implementation Model of the Service To guide the implementation of MAS, the FISpH model will be used. This model proposes five different stages.
Implementation Stages
• Exploration: preparation of the pharmacy system and environment for the implementation of the MAS.
This exploration will include: system exploration with possible participants community pharmacist owners and providers who have been invited to participate, training of change agents and discussions with senior management at each of the PAs and SEFAC.
During each of the stages (exploration, preparation, testing and operation, and initial sustainability), implementation strategies will be used by FaFas and SeFaFas to assist moderate implementation factors (overcome barriers, promote facilitators and increase the use of the implementation process). Implementation factors (barriers and facilitators) will be grouped into five domains. The impact of any used strategies (grouped into four stages of facilitation) on the implementation factors will be evaluated.
Implementation Indicators
Evaluation throughout the different stages of the FISpH model will be carried out according to the following criteria:
This data will be obtained directly from the SEFAC eXPERT® IT system. Training session for the Change Agents (FaFa and SEFaFa) There will be an 18-hour prior training for FaFas and a 12-hour session for SeFaFas, covering general concepts of the MAS, good practices of the MAS in Community Pharmacy, patient and interprofessional communication, data from the INDICA+PRO Impact study, protocols and primary physician referral criteria, SEFAC eXPERT® registration, case studies and the Implementation study protocol. FaFas and SeFaFas will receive ongoing training, at least one per month, on the characteristics and tasks of change facilitators, such as recognising barriers and facilitators, as well as designing the relevant implementation strategies.
Identification of Implementation Factors (barriers and facilitators) FaFas and SeFaFas will be provided with a classification system for barriers and facilitators that they will use as a tool to assist analyses when interacting with their pharmacies/pharmacists. These interactions/process will be documented in an Electronic Data Capture (EDC). The classification system consists of an adaptation of the constructs listed in the Consolidated Framework for Implementation Research (CFIR).
Design of implementation strategies FaFas and SeFaFas will be provided with a classification system for implementation strategies which they will use to design strategies and to document in the Electronic Data Capture (EDC). This classification system consists of an adaptation of the facilitation activities listed by Dogherty et al.
Training session for pharmacists in participating pharmacies
There will be two options for the pharmacist provider training:
Competencies to be covered include the ability to:
Data: Operational definitions for key process and outcome variables Both implementation and patient consultation process and outcome variables will be measured during the different study stages.
Variables: Implementation indicators
The variables related to the implantation processes and outcomes are:
Variable: Service indicators Socio-demographic patient characteristics: gender (qualitative dichotomous variables), age (discrete quantitative variable) and physiological state, in the case of pregnancy or lactation.
The variables related to the impact of the MAS are outcome indicators for the clinical and economic and humanistic impact:
A patient follow up will occur at a maximum of 10 days, depending on the type of consultation. This follow up will be undertaken either through an email or through a face to face meeting the following variables:
Data Analysis Continuous variables will be reported using mean and standard deviation, or median and percentiles depending on the distribution of the variable (the Kolmogorov Smirnov test will be used to assess normality). Categorical variables will be reported using percentages. For the comparison of continuous variables, the T Student's test or the ANOVA test will be carried out if there is a normal distribution, and Kruskal-Wallis otherwise. The comparison of the categorical variables will be carried out using the χ2 test, the Fisher's exact test or Yate's chi-squared test if necessary. To determine the relationship between the dependent variables (appropriate referral, improvement of the minor ailment and subsequent consultation for the same symptom) and the independent variables, logistic regression models will be performed including the variables with statistical significance in the bivariate model. The goodness of fit of the model will be verified using the Hosmer-Lemeshow test. The level of significance will be set at p <0.05. Machine learning and big data techniques are being considered for predictive modelling.
Quality control in data collection The fidelity of the participating pharmacists to the study protocol will be designed using a consensual protocol, and monitored during periodic FaFa visits to the pharmacy, in which the pharmacist's records will be reviewed to ensure that the interventions are carried out according to the protocol for the minor ailment in question. This will allow the FaFas to provide feedback to each participating pharmacist, as a method of continuous quality improvement of their interventions and fidelity to the study.
Data handling The research team will only have access to de-identified data of pharmacists and patients. Data will be extracted form SEFAC eXPERT® IT system by SEFAC staff or contractors.
Informed consent The participating pharmacist will inform patients about the study through a Patient Information Sheet, ensuring that they understand the information before giving their consent. The patient must sign the Informed Consent document (of which they will receive a copy if they should request it), knowing that they may leave the study at any time.
Data confidentiality Privacy protection and the confidential treatment of personal data resulting from the research activity will be guaranteed, in accordance with the provisions of Organic Law 3/2018, of the fifth of December, on the Protection of Personal Data and guarantee of digital rights.
The information will be coded, anonymized and the data will be referenced by randomly assigned numbers for both the published and non-published information. All the information collected will be stored in the repository of the Pharmaceutical Care Research Group of the University of Granada and the Spanish Society of Community Pharmacy (SEFAC), being accessible only to authorized personnel.
Ethical aspects / protection of the participating subjects The study will be carried out following the "Ethical Principles for Medical Research Involving Human Subjects" that are included in the Declaration of Helsinki (Fortaleza, October 2013). The study will be undertaken based on procedures that ensure compliance with the ICH/BPC (International Harmonization Conference) standards of Good Clinical Practice. This study protocol has been approved by the Granada Research Ethics Committee (CEI-Granada) on the fifth of February 2020.
Dissemination Plan The findings obtained after the study will be disseminated through the usual methods of scientific dissemination, including communications to congresses, publications in scientific journals and those of the Pharmaceutical Association, as well as other online or electronic means of dissemination.
Financial Support The study has the financial support of the Spanish Society of Community Pharmacy (SEFAC) and the Pharmaceutical Association of Valencia (MICOF), as well as the participating Pharmacists Associations. Pharmacists participating in this Program will not receive any financial compensation for their participation.
Condition | Acne, Bites, Burns, Cold, Cold Sore Mouth, Constipation, Cough, Dental Trauma, Dermatitis, Diarrhea, Dry Eye, Dysmenorrhea, Flatulence, Foot Fungal Infection, Hemorrhoids, Headache, Heartburn, Hyperhidrosis, Mouth Ulcer, Musculoskeletal Pain, Nasal Congestion, Rash, Red Eye, Sleep Disorder, Soft Tissue Injuries, Sore Throat, Stress Disorder, Acute, Temperature Regulation Disorder, Vaginal Candidiasis, Varicose Veins, Vomiting |
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Treatment | Minor ailment service |
Clinical Study Identifier | NCT05247333 |
Sponsor | Universidad de Granada |
Last Modified on | 18 March 2022 |
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