Home
Scholarly Works
Community pharmacists’ experiences and people at...
Journal article

Community pharmacists’ experiences and people at risk of suicide in Canada and Australia: a thematic analysis

Abstract

PurposeTo explore Canadian and Australian community pharmacists’ practice experiences in caring for people at risk of suicide.MethodsWe conducted a thematic analysis of 176 responses to an open-ended extension question in an online survey.ResultsFour themes were identified and include referrals and triage, accessibility for confiding, emotional toll, and stigma. Subthemes included gatekeeping the medication supply, sole disclosure, planning for end of life, concerns of support people, assessing the validity of suicidality, gaps in the system, not directly asking, ill-equipped, resources in the pharmacy, relying on others to continue care, and attention seeking.ConclusionsCommunity pharmacists are caring for patients at risk of suicide frequently, and often with patients seeking the help of pharmacists directly. Pharmacists engage in activities and actions that would be considered outside of the traditional dispensing roles and provide support and intervention to people at risk of suicide through collaboration and other mechanisms. Further research to determine appropriate education and training and postvention supports is required.

Authors

Murphy AL; Ataya R; Himmelman D; O’Reilly C; Rosen A; Salvador-Carulla L; Martin-Misener R; Burge F; Kutcher S; Gardner DM

Journal

Social Psychiatry and Psychiatric Epidemiology, Vol. 53, No. 11, pp. 1173–1184

Publisher

Springer Nature

Publication Date

November 1, 2018

DOI

10.1007/s00127-018-1553-7

ISSN

0933-7954

Contact the Experts team