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Barriers to Community Pharmacists’ Prescribing Role in Limpopo Province, South Africa: A Qualitative Study


Noko Brilliant Moloto
Tiisetso Aubrey Chuene
Kgaugelo Daphney Makgopa
Koketso Malekhwekhwe Mogano
Mmakgwedi Unika Rakgoale
Manase Sarender Rekhotho

Abstract

Background
The healthcare system had rapidly advanced with greater focus on improving the quality of healthcare and safety of patients. Parallel with the transforming healthcare systems, new policies have emerged to allow pharmacists to prescribe. Little is known about the barriers to community pharmacists’ prescribing role in Limpopo province.
Purpose
The purpose of this study was to explore the barriers to community pharmacists’ prescribing role in Limpopo province and give recommendations to enhance pharmacists’ prescribing role at community pharmacies.
Methodology
This was a qualitative study in which community pharmacists in Polokwane were interviewed. Due to data saturation, 14 pharmacists participated. Data collection was through semi-structured face-to-face interviews. The interviews were audio-recorded, transcribed verbatim and analysed using Tesch’s open coding method.
Results
Most participants reported their readiness to prescribe and viewed it as a positive initiative. Results revealed barriers associated with the prescribing role such as lack of knowledge and awareness of the supplementary program, lack of dedicated time for prescribing, lack of recognition from employer, lack of support from medical doctors, and limited scope of practice.
Conclusion
Pharmacists’ prescribing role is a great initiative that will strengthen the healthcare system however the identified barriers need to be addressed to ensure that pharmacists offer safe and effective patient-centred healthcare. A coordinated effort is therefore necessary for the formulation of clear policy frameworks, including more training facilities, increasing stakeholder awareness to support pharmacist prescribing role, and identifying financial, infrastructure, and other resource demands to support the smooth integration of pharmacist prescribing.
Rwanda J Med Health Sci 2024;7(2):106-119


Journal Identifiers


eISSN: 2616-9827
print ISSN: 2616-9819