TY - JOUR
T1 - Nonprescription syringe sales
T2 - Resistant pharmacists’ attitudes and practices
AU - Chiarello, Elizabeth
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2016 Elsevier Ireland Ltd
PY - 2016/9/1
Y1 - 2016/9/1
N2 - Objectives To examine barriers to nonprescription syringe sales (NPSS) in pharmacies by examining resistant pharmacists’ willingness to provide syringes to people who inject drugs (PWID) and their current practices for provision or refusal. Methods Qualitative, semi-structured, in-depth interviews with community pharmacists in California, Kansas, Mississippi, and New Jersey. Participants include seventeen community pharmacists who expressed ethical concerns about providing syringes drawn from a larger sample of 71 community pharmacists participating in a study of ethical decision-making. Analysis captures pharmacists’ descriptions of their experiences providing syringes to suspected PWID. Results Pharmacists who identified syringes as a key ethical issue exhibited significant ambivalence about providing syringes to PWID. Most of these pharmacists were aware of harm reduction logics, but endorsed them to varying degrees. Moral concerns about supplying PWID with syringes were mediated by law and organizational policy. Many pharmacists who considered syringes an ethical challenge allayed their concerns by creating informal policy and engaging in deterrence practices designed to dissuade PWID from coming to the pharmacy. Conclusions As heroin abuse rates continue to rise, pharmacists are undoubtedly integral allies in the fight to prevent the spread of communicable diseases like HIV/AIDS and Hepatitis C. Education should be aimed at identifying barriers to NPSS resulting from resistant pharmacists’ attitudes and practices. Increased education paired with favorable law and organizational policy and decentralization of syringe provision could increase access to clean needles and decrease public health risks.
AB - Objectives To examine barriers to nonprescription syringe sales (NPSS) in pharmacies by examining resistant pharmacists’ willingness to provide syringes to people who inject drugs (PWID) and their current practices for provision or refusal. Methods Qualitative, semi-structured, in-depth interviews with community pharmacists in California, Kansas, Mississippi, and New Jersey. Participants include seventeen community pharmacists who expressed ethical concerns about providing syringes drawn from a larger sample of 71 community pharmacists participating in a study of ethical decision-making. Analysis captures pharmacists’ descriptions of their experiences providing syringes to suspected PWID. Results Pharmacists who identified syringes as a key ethical issue exhibited significant ambivalence about providing syringes to PWID. Most of these pharmacists were aware of harm reduction logics, but endorsed them to varying degrees. Moral concerns about supplying PWID with syringes were mediated by law and organizational policy. Many pharmacists who considered syringes an ethical challenge allayed their concerns by creating informal policy and engaging in deterrence practices designed to dissuade PWID from coming to the pharmacy. Conclusions As heroin abuse rates continue to rise, pharmacists are undoubtedly integral allies in the fight to prevent the spread of communicable diseases like HIV/AIDS and Hepatitis C. Education should be aimed at identifying barriers to NPSS resulting from resistant pharmacists’ attitudes and practices. Increased education paired with favorable law and organizational policy and decentralization of syringe provision could increase access to clean needles and decrease public health risks.
KW - Behavior
KW - Heroin
KW - HIV/AIDS
KW - Nonprescription syringe sales
KW - Pharmacist
KW - Qualitative research
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/84979523471
U2 - 10.1016/j.drugalcdep.2016.06.023
DO - 10.1016/j.drugalcdep.2016.06.023
M3 - Article
C2 - 27423213
AN - SCOPUS:84979523471
SN - 0376-8716
VL - 166
SP - 45
EP - 50
JO - Drug and Alcohol Dependence
JF - Drug and Alcohol Dependence
ER -