Development of a Self-Assessment Audit Instrument to Support Climate-Conscious Community Pharmacy Practice and Education
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
3. Results
- (a)
- The need to enhance general awareness of climate-conscious pharmacy practice amongst community pharmacists: While key informants agreed that most pharmacists were—conceptually—supportive of climate and heat reduction goals, and aware of climate change as a real and pressing global problem, they noted that most community pharmacists likely felt overwhelmed, helpless, or hopeless about their own potential role in climate-related mitigation or adaptation strategies within a community pharmacy context. While pharmacists did not need convincing that climate change was real and damaging, they needed empowerment and motivational support to believe they could—and should—engage in climate-conscious pharmacy practice activities that would still make meaningful albeit small contributions to achieving climate goals. In part, this may be reflective of many community pharmacists’ own professional identity as a “helper”, a “supporter”, or a “responder” rather than as a “leader”, a “decision maker” or an “initiator” of change. Key informants shared their own trajectories and professional development in this area, noting that as “average” pharmacists, they too had limited awareness of what individual community pharmacists could do, but because of their own passion and interest in climate change and environmental sustainability, they embarked on their own personal learning journeys to fill in knowledge gaps. Key informants also highlighted the importance and value of building communities of practice, and the significant value of grassroots community pharmacy organizations where groups of interested pharmacists could meet and learn from one another, rather than simply await hierarchical top-down lectures from experts who were not actually working as community or hospital pharmacists. Key informants refined and endorsed the notion that a “self-assessment audit instrument” approach to enhancing awareness was appropriate and potentially impactful, noting the value of “carrots” (positive, motivational, or educational approaches) rather than “sticks” (punishments, penalties, or guilt-driven techniques) in building awareness and making a commitment to change. A self-assessment audit instrument that could be used privately by an individual pharmacist to help them reflect upon their current knowledge and skills with respect to climate-conscious pharmacy practice, and that provided abundant links to existing resources and literature to help expand learning and encourage follow-up reading, was conceptualized by key informants as a potentially valuable initial strategy to support pharmacists.
“I think there’s a general lack of awareness of how detrimental our healthcare systems and pharmacies are to the environment, and so I think raising that awareness and then getting pharmacist to actually take action in ways that are feasible for their pharmacy environment.”
“The awareness of sustainability and its importance in my practice, and then once you become aware, you start to think about what I am really doing as a sustainable practice.”
- (b)
- Waste disposal: Key informants identified climate-conscious waste-disposal practices as integral to efforts to reduce climate impacts and footprints, and as a specific and unique set of practices for community pharmacists to lead. As discussed previously, the waste-linked pollution of soil, air, and water has devastating public health and climate-related outcomes. Pharmacy has historically been a leader in healthcare with respect to waste management through activities ranging from medication take-back programmes, expanded recycling initiatives, and safe disposal (including sharps disposal) activities. Beyond these traditional activities, however, key informants identified other areas where community pharmacists could exert influence and use their scope of practice to manage waste more effectively. First and foremost were consciousness raising activities associated with the operations of a typical community pharmacy: for example, switching to lower carbon-impact LED lighting systems that provide sufficient illumination with less electricity consumption is an important operational change within the reach of many community pharmacies that reduces electricity waste and consequently reduces fossil fuel consumption. Similarly, timed lighting or motion-detector lighting systems can significantly reduce unnecessary and wasteful electricity consumption. An important and intriguing idea raised by some key informants was related to the notion of “hygiene theatre”, which refers to the array of practices that pharmacists take for granted that are done in the name of sterility, cleanliness, and tidiness. For example, the routine use of alcohol swabbing prior to immunization has been increasingly questioned: while it is taken for granted by patients, pharmacists, and other healthcare professionals that alcohol swabbing reduces risks of infection or other harms prior to injection, there is limited scientific evidence and no clear consensus as to whether this is actually true, particularly for intramuscular injections that many pharmacists routinely administer. If one considers the recent COVID-19 mass vaccination campaign and the hundreds of millions of jabs administered by pharmacists world-wide—and then considers that almost every one of those jabs was first accompanied by the opening of a small non-recyclable foil package, the unfurling of an alcohol swab, the gratuitous swiping of that swab on the skin, and then the disposal of both the foil package and the swab—the environmental footprint of the COVID-19 vaccination campaign becomes unfathomable. Does every person need and benefit from alcohol swabbing prior to vaccination? Is there sufficient microbiological evidence to support such an environmentally impactful routine practice for everyone? Or is this an example of wasteful hygiene theatre designed to provide the illusion of sterility and cleanliness [21,22,23,24,25,26]? Clearly, a further evaluation of this practice is required, but this example of a potentially wasteful practice that is simply assumed to be necessary and beneficial highlights the need to consider more climate-conscious pharmacy practices. Ultimately, key informants noted that much of the waste generation in community pharmacy arises from a lack of thoughtfulness or unreflective practice. Like the alcohol swab example, routine unquestioned practices that generate waste need to be reflected upon more closely to determine alternative options that are less environmentally damaging; raising an awareness of the wastefulness in pharmacy practice is an important first step. A self-assessment audit instrument to highlight these issues, identify opportunities, signpost further resources, and trigger more self-reflection and thoughtfulness around routine practices could have significant benefits in identifying opportunities to reduce, reuse, and recycle in community pharmacy.
“Waste management, how the medications, if they were disposed of properly versus if we don’t really encourage patients to bring back the medications that they don’t need, what kind of environmental impact it could have.”
“Implementing a really strong medications take back programme” and “using paper bags instead of plastic”, and “recycling practices overall.”
- (c)
- Educating patients: As the most accessible and trusted of health professionals, community pharmacists have unique opportunities to build sustainable positive relationships with patients in their communities. These relationships form the foundation of the third common theme identified in this research associated with climate-conscious pharmacy practice: focused education for patients highlighting the climate impacts of medications as a way of further broadening knowledge across the population. Pharmacy has already demonstrated some success in initiatives such as this; for example, the Choose Wisely public education campaign highlighted the importance of not taking antibiotics for viral infections by identifying the costs and societal consequences of unnecessary antibiotic use. Initiating similar education campaigns that address issues of the inappropriate, unnecessary, or wasteful use of medications as an environmental issue (not simply a personal health issue) was identified by participants as an important specific task for community pharmacists in supporting climate and heat reduction goals. The pharmacist’s unique ability to engage with and build long term relationships with patients provides unique opportunities to introduce these concepts into the broader community in terms of both personal health benefits as well as planetary health outcomes.
“Pharmaceutical care plan, being able to tell your patient if he or she is interested and what the carbon footprint is over the next 10 years of you taking this drug because I really think that the Holy Grail and all this is needing less health care………educating people on the potential carbon footprint of whatever medication they are taking.”
“So, educating consumers about how to not flush these things down the toilet have not to put them in the landfills, but also their own commercial waste.”
- (d)
- Changes in prescribing and dispensing: Some of the most exciting potential areas where pharmacists could have meaningful impacts on planetary health are connected to the rapidly evolving scope of practice of pharmacists in Canada as well as other countries. As independent prescribing, modification/adaptation of prescriptions, independent therapeutic substitutions, and deprescribing become more commonplace in community pharmacy, there are tremendous opportunities for community pharmacists to leverage their new scope of practice in ways that also benefit planetary health. Even in jurisdictions where pharmacists’ scope of practice does not permit independent prescribing, pharmacists have always used their expertise to assess the “appropriateness” of medications for a patient. Generally, “appropriateness” has been defined in terms of a medication’s efficacy, cost, side-effect profile, potential for drug-drug interactions, etc. Key informants highlighted how the “carbon footprint” of medications could be added to the list of criteria that define appropriateness and pharmacists could incorporate this element into their clinical decision making (or, if allowed, into their prescribing). Specific areas to consider include the kind of packaging used for a medication (recyclable paper vs. non-recyclable foil), and the manufacturing source (e.g., procuring from local manufacturers to reduce carbon impacts associated with international supply chains). The most frequently given example related to therapeutic substitutions is the move away from polluting multi-dose inhalers (MDI) used for asthma or COPD to more climate friendly dry powder inhalers (DPI). The environmental implications of the mass therapeutic substitution of DPI for MDI prescriptions would be significant, and if patients are equally able to tolerate either formulation, pharmacists exercising their scope of practice to independently adapt prescriptions or therapeutically substitute these medications would have considerable carbon savings [26]. Key informants in this study highlighted limitations to this approach: currently there are very limited sources of reputable information regarding the carbon footprints of medications, and few reliable sources that help pharmacists compare the carbon footprints of therapeutic alternatives. This was identified as a critical research and practice support need. Beyond the incorporation of carbon footprints into therapeutic decision making, the growing interest in deprescribing also was identified as an environmental benefit. While deprescribing is primarily driven by the patient’s unique health needs, the positive environmental benefits of reducing the volume of medications consumed is an important additional benefit. Overall, key informants highlighted the significant potential of leveraging pharmacists’ drug expertise to reduce unnecessary polypharmacy for the benefit of both individual patient’s and the environment.
“As well as selecting products that are more environmentally friendly overall, such as inhalers—if a patient is a good candidate for a DPI in place of an MDI, working with the physician and the patient to make that change.”
“Other interesting concept is sustainable prescribing—lots of potential here for pharmacists.”
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
Q1. So, tell me a little bit about yourself and your background and interest in environmental sustainability? |
Q2. What do you think should be the most important priorities for community pharmacists with regards to environmental sustainability? |
Q3. As you know we are trying to create a self-assessment audit instrument that focuses on the environmental sustainability of community pharmacy practice… What do you think are the key themes that we should prioritise for this instrument? |
Q4. What would you say the average community pharmacist would need to know in terms of skills, attitudes, and behaviours in respects to environmentally sustainable practice? |
Q5. What resources would you like to see signposted in the audit to help pharmacists learn more about actions they could take to support more climate friendly practice? |
Q6. What advice do you have with respect to the design of a self-assessment audit instrument? Have you developed one or used one yourself before? What types of features do you think would make it more impactful and entice people’s interest to using it and making it useful? |
Q7. Please let me know if you have any other thoughts or suggestions to make this project a success… also if you happen to know anyone else that would like to participate in the interview process, I would really appreciate if you could forward their contact information. |
Appendix B
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Fisher, S.; Mathers, A.; Austin, Z. Development of a Self-Assessment Audit Instrument to Support Climate-Conscious Community Pharmacy Practice and Education. Pharmacy 2023, 11, 158. https://doi.org/10.3390/pharmacy11050158
Fisher S, Mathers A, Austin Z. Development of a Self-Assessment Audit Instrument to Support Climate-Conscious Community Pharmacy Practice and Education. Pharmacy. 2023; 11(5):158. https://doi.org/10.3390/pharmacy11050158
Chicago/Turabian StyleFisher, Stella, Annalise Mathers, and Zubin Austin. 2023. "Development of a Self-Assessment Audit Instrument to Support Climate-Conscious Community Pharmacy Practice and Education" Pharmacy 11, no. 5: 158. https://doi.org/10.3390/pharmacy11050158
APA StyleFisher, S., Mathers, A., & Austin, Z. (2023). Development of a Self-Assessment Audit Instrument to Support Climate-Conscious Community Pharmacy Practice and Education. Pharmacy, 11(5), 158. https://doi.org/10.3390/pharmacy11050158