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E-prescribing and access to prescription medicines during lockdown: experience of patients in Aotearoa/New Zealand

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posted on 2021-07-20, 21:08 authored by F Imlach, E McKinlay, J Kennedy, C Morris, Megan Pledger, J Cumming, Karen McBride-Henry
Background: Health services internationally have been compelled to change their methods of service delivery in response to the global COVID-19 pandemic, to mitigate the spread of infection amongst health professionals and patients. In Aotearoa/New Zealand, widespread electronic delivery of prescriptions (e-prescribing) was enabled. The aim of the research was to explore patients’ experiences of how lockdown, changes to prescribing and the interface between general practices and community pharmacy affected access to prescription medications. Method: The research employed a mixed-method approach. This included an online survey (n = 1,010) and in-depth interviews with a subset of survey respondents (n = 38) during the first COVID-19 lockdown (March–May 2020). Respondents were recruited through a snowballing approach, starting with social media and email list contacts of the research team. In keeping with the approach, descriptive statistics of survey data and thematic analysis of qualitative interview and open-ended questions in survey data were combined. Results: For most respondents who received a prescription during lockdown, this was sent directly to the pharmacy. Most people picked up their medication from the pharmacy; home delivery of medication was rare (4%). Survey and interview respondents wanted e-prescribing to continue post-lockdown and described where things worked well and where they encountered delays in the process of acquiring prescription medication. Conclusions: E-prescribing has the potential to improve access to prescription medication and is convenient for patients. The increase in e-prescribing during lockdown highlighted how the system could be improved, through better feedback about errors, more consistency across practices and pharmacies, more proactive communication with patients, and equitable prescribing costs.

History

Preferred citation

Imlach, F., McKinlay, E., Kennedy, J., Morris, C., Pledger, M., Cumming, J. & McBride-Henry, K. (2021). E-prescribing and access to prescription medicines during lockdown: experience of patients in Aotearoa/New Zealand. BMC Family Practice, 22(1), 140-. https://doi.org/10.1186/s12875-021-01490-0

Journal title

BMC Family Practice

Volume

22

Issue

1

Publication date

2021-12-01

Pagination

140

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Publication status

Accepted

Online publication date

2021-07-01

ISSN

1471-2296

eISSN

1471-2296

Article number

140

Language

en

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