# Community pharmacists’ views towards implementing a patient self-administered screening tool designed to identify risk of medication-related problems

**Authors:** Mohammed S. Salahudeen, Ahmed Samy Saadeldean, Gregory M. Peterson, Behailu Terefe Tesfaye, Colin M. Curtain

PMC · DOI: 10.3389/fphar.2025.1531500 · 2025-03-26

## TL;DR

This study explores Australian community pharmacists' views on using a self-administered tool to identify patients at risk of medication-related problems.

## Contribution

The study provides new insights into pharmacists' support and perceived barriers to implementing such tools in community pharmacies.

## Key findings

- Most pharmacists support using a screening tool to identify high-risk patients for medication-related problems.
- Time constraints and staff shortages are the main barriers to implementing the tool.
- Effective communication and patient appreciation are key facilitators for successful implementation.

## Abstract

There is limited information regarding community pharmacists’ perspectives on implementing a self-administered screening tool for identifying patients at risk of medication-related problems. This study assessed Australian pharmacists’ views on introducing such a tool within the community pharmacy setting.

An online cross-sectional survey was conducted among Australian community pharmacists from March to May 2023. The survey collected relevant demographic data and responses on perceived barriers and facilitators to implementing the screening tool. Reliability statistics were computed for the responses on barriers and facilitators, and chi-square or Fisher’s Exact tests were performed to assess their association with demographic variables.

Two hundred thirty-one community pharmacists across Australia were surveyed. Most (78%) reported that medication-related problems are common and expressed support for a patient self-administered screening tool to identify patients at high risk of medication-related problems (88%). Over two-thirds (69%) were willing to allocate time for reviewing patient medications if flagged for medication-related problems. The most frequently anticipated barriers to implementing screening tools were time constraints for pharmacists (63%), staff shortage and limited patient interest (each accounting for 57%). In contrast, effective communication with patients (69%) and patients’ appreciation of pharmacists’ expertise and efforts (67%) were predominantly stated facilitators.

Most community pharmacists were supportive of implementing a patient self-administered screening tool to identify patients at risk of medication-related problems. The study’s findings provide valuable insights for developing medication-related problems screening tools tailored to the Australian community pharmacy setting.

## Full-text entities

- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11979211