Investigating general practitioner engagement with pharmacists in home medicines review

Daniel Costa, Connie Van, Penny Abbott, Ines Krass

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

    21 Citations (Scopus)

    Abstract

    The Home Medicines Review (HMR) involves a home visit from an accredited HMR pharmacist to review a patient's medicines, and a report to the patient's general practitioner (GP) with recommendations for improving medicine management. Notwithstanding evidence supporting the benefits of medicines review, broad uptake by GPs in Australia remains low. We developed the 10-item Home Medicines Review Inventory (HMRI) to assess GP attitudes and behaviours regarding the HMR and modelled factors associated with the frequency of GP engagement with HMRs. Four items assessing frequency of behaviours and six items assessing attitudes related to HMR were answered by 180 GPs in a national GP survey. The HMRI's psychometric properties were examined with exploratory factor analysis (EFA), Rasch analysis and correlations with related instruments. Structural equation modelling was used to evaluate factors associated with HMR-related behaviours. EFA and Rasch analysis generally supported the current format of the instrument. Attitudes to HMR, gender, previous positive experiences with pharmacists, a system for working together and participation in joint education activities predicted frequency of HMR-related behaviours. Although GPs' attitudes to HMR were generally positive, HMR-related behaviours tended to occur with low frequency. This instrument may be used to investigate why HMR uptake has thus far been low and also help identify opportunities for building interprofessional communication and trust between GPs and pharmacists.
    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)469-475
    Number of pages7
    JournalJournal of Interprofessional Care
    Volume29
    Issue number5
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 2015

    Keywords

    • home medicines review
    • pharmacists
    • physicians (general practice)
    • questionnaires

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