Dervla Kelly
Data Collector
A scoping review of non-professional medication practices and medication safety outcomes during public health emergencies. [Dataset]
Contributors
Aaron Koay
Data Collector
Gabriela Mineva
Data Collector
Monika Volz
Data Collector
Aoibhin McCool
Data Collector
Eavan McLoughlin
Data Collector
Ruán Ó Conluain
Data Collector
Manuj Sharma
Data Collector
Aisling Kerr
Data Collector
Bryony Dean Franklin
Data Collector
Tamasine Grimes
Data Collector
Abstract
The aim of this study was to provide an overview of the extent and nature of the available research on lay (non-professional) medication practices and medication safety outcomes at times of PHE. Public health emergencies (PHEs) are defined as extraordinary events with associated health consequences that have the potential to overwhelm routine community capabilities to address them. Recently, there have been several significant PHEs associated with infectious diseases, such as the COVID-19 pandemic, and climatological or ecological issues, such as flooding, hurricanes and earthquakes. Potential issues associated with PHEs include reduced access to health care; supply chain interruption; changes in household mobility, personal well-being and routine support; and widening of health inequalities. These create additional challenges for medications safety, at times when preventing and mitigating medication-related harm and any associated healthcare utilisation are particularly important. Although previous studies have reported on the impact of PHEs and their implications for health care generally, the specific impact on medication management is less well known, particularly regarding lay people's medication practices and medication safety. Inappropriate changes in medication-related behaviour during a PHE may have adverse acute effects on individual health or necessitate the need for urgent healthcare intervention. They also have potential to worsen chronic ill health leading to poor individual and population health outcomes and greater strain on health services during all stages of a PHE. As such, there is an important need to optimise personal medication management/usage during and after PHEs.
Citation
KELLY, D., KOAY, A., MINEVA, G., VOLZ, M., MCCOOL, A., MCLOUGHLIN, E., Ó CONLUAIN, R., SHARMA, M., KERR, A., FRANKLIN, B.D. and GRIMES, T. 2022. A scoping review of non-professional medication practices and medication safety outcomes during public health emergencies. [Dataset]. Public health [online], 214, pages 50-60. Available from: https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0033350622003158?via%3Dihub#appsec1
Acceptance Date | Oct 18, 2022 |
---|---|
Online Publication Date | Dec 13, 2022 |
Publication Date | Jan 31, 2023 |
Deposit Date | Jan 5, 2023 |
Publicly Available Date | Dec 14, 2023 |
Publisher | Elsevier |
DOI | https://doi.org/10.1016/j.puhe.2022.10.026 |
Keywords | Medication safety; Public health emergency; Medication-related harm; Medication adherence |
Public URL | https://rgu-repository.worktribe.com/output/1848842 |
Related Public URLs | https://rgu-repository.worktribe.com/output/1840253 |
Type of Data | 5 supplementary DOCX files. |
Collection Date | Apr 30, 2021 |
Collection Method | The aim of this study was to provide an overview of the extent and nature of the available research on lay (non-professional) medication practices and medication safety outcomes at times of PHE. Public health emergencies (PHEs) are defined as extraordinary events with associated health consequences that have the potential to overwhelm routine community capabilities to address them. Recently, there have been several significant PHEs associated with infectious diseases, such as the COVID-19 pandemic, and climatological or ecological issues, such as flooding, hurricanes and earthquakes. Potential issues associated with PHEs include reduced access to health care; supply chain interruption; changes in household mobility, personal well-being and routine support; and widening of health inequalities. These create additional challenges for medications safety, at times when preventing and mitigating medication-related harm and any associated healthcare utilisation are particularly important. Although previous studies have reported on the impact of PHEs and their implications for health care generally, the specific impact on medication management is less well known, particularly regarding lay people's medication practices and medication safety. Inappropriate changes in medication-related behaviour during a PHE may have adverse acute effects on individual health or necessitate the need for urgent healthcare intervention. They also have potential to worsen chronic ill health leading to poor individual and population health outcomes and greater strain on health services during all stages of a PHE. As such, there is an important need to optimise personal medication management/usage during and after PHEs.nstitute and Trip database. The search reviewed records from database inception to April 2021, with no limits to language or date range applied. The study population included all individuals, regardless of demographic or clinical characteristics; any qualitative or quantitative outcome reporting on non-professional medication use, practices or behaviours or medication safety outcomes that met the criteria. Data relating to RQs were synthesised from the charted data and reported as narrative accounts. Identified medication-related practices and outcomes were grouped into common themes. A PRISMA flow chart was prepared. A total of 129 studies were included in the review, the majority reporting on infectious events (n = 68, 53%), climatological or ecological events (n = 50, 39%) and the remainder a variety of other disasters. |
Files
KELLY 2022 A scoping review (DATA)
(150 Kb)
Archive
Publisher Licence URL
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/
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