Charlotte Woodcock
Designing a primary care pharmacist-led review for people treated with opioids for persistent pain: a multi-method qualitative study
Woodcock, Charlotte; Cornwall, Nicola; Dikomitis, Lisa; Harrisson, Sarah A; White, Simon; Helliwell, Toby; Knaggs, Roger; Hodgson, Eleanor; Pincus, Tamar; Santer, Miriam; Mallen, Christian; Ashworth, Julie; Jinks, Clare
Authors
Nicola Cornwall
Lisa Dikomitis
Sarah A Harrisson
Simon White
Toby Helliwell
ROGER KNAGGS Roger.Knaggs@nottingham.ac.uk
Professor of Pain Management
Eleanor Hodgson
Tamar Pincus
Miriam Santer
Christian Mallen
Julie Ashworth
Clare Jinks
Abstract
Opioids are frequently prescribed for persistent non-cancer pain despite limited evidence of long-term effectiveness and risk of harm. Evidence-based interventions to address inappropriate opioid prescribing are lacking. To explore perspectives of people living with persistent pain to understand barriers and facilitators in reducing opioids in the context of a pharmacist-led primary care review, and identify review components and features for optimal delivery. Primary care multi-method qualitative study. Adults with experience of persistent pain and taking opioids participated in semi-structured interviews (n=15, 73% female) and an online discussion forum (n=31). The Theoretical Domains Framework (TDF) provided a framework for data collection and thematic analysis, involving deductive analysis to TDF domains, inductive analysis within-domains to generate subthemes, and subtheme comparison to form across-domain overarching themes. The behaviour change technique taxonomy v.1 and motivational behaviour change technique classification system were used to systematically map themes to behaviour change techniques to identify potential review components and delivery features. 32 facilitator and barrier subthemes for patients reducing opioids were identified across 13 TDF domains. These combined into six overarching themes: learning to live with pain, opioid reduction expectations, assuming a medical model, pharmacist-delivered reviews, pharmacist-patient relationship and patient engagement. Subthemes mapped to 21 unique behaviour change techniques, yielding 17 components and five delivery features for the proposed PROMPPT review. This study generated theoretically-informed evidence for design of a practice pharmacist-led PROMPPT review. Future research will test the feasibility and acceptability of the PROMPPT review and pharmacist training. [Abstract copyright: Copyright © 2024, The Authors.]
Citation
Woodcock, C., Cornwall, N., Dikomitis, L., Harrisson, S. A., White, S., Helliwell, T., …Jinks, C. (in press). Designing a primary care pharmacist-led review for people treated with opioids for persistent pain: a multi-method qualitative study. BJGP Open, BJGPO.2023.0221. https://doi.org/10.3399/BJGPO.2023.0221
Journal Article Type | Article |
---|---|
Acceptance Date | Mar 26, 2024 |
Online Publication Date | Apr 17, 2024 |
Deposit Date | Jun 13, 2024 |
Publicly Available Date | Jun 19, 2024 |
Journal | BJGP Open |
Publisher | Royal College of General Practitioners |
Peer Reviewed | Peer Reviewed |
Pages | BJGPO.2023.0221 |
DOI | https://doi.org/10.3399/BJGPO.2023.0221 |
Keywords | Pharmacists, Chronic pain, Opioid analgesic |
Public URL | https://nottingham-repository.worktribe.com/output/34619332 |
Files
BJGPO.2023.0221.full
(691 Kb)
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Licence
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
Publisher Licence URL
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
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