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Exploring pharmacists’ perceptions of their current role in mental health trusts in England: a qualitative study

Naqvi, A. A. ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0003-2637-0424, Khan, M. U., Nguyen, H., Karim, L., Asha, S. and Nnadi, A. (2025) Exploring pharmacists’ perceptions of their current role in mental health trusts in England: a qualitative study. Healthcare. ISSN 2227-9032 (In Press)

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Abstract/Summary

Aim: This study assessed how pharmacists perceive the impact of their role in the mental health (MH) services in two National Health Service (NHS) Trusts in England and their views on this service. Methods: An interview-based study was conducted from September to December 2023 on Microsoft Teams® by interviewing the pharmacists involved in MH services in Berkshire Healthcare NHS Foundation Trust & the Birmingham and Solihull Mental Health Trust (BSMHFT) in England. Interviews were conducted using a semi-structured interview guide containing questions related to pharmacists’ roles, activi-ties, perceptions about the service, and future recommendations. Transcripts were pre-pared and analysed using thematic analysis. The study was approved by the ethics com-mittee of the School of Pharmacy at the University of Reading and was registered as a ser-vice evaluation with both Trusts. Results: A total of 11 participants attended the inter-views. Most of the participants self-identified as women (N = 9), worked between 25 and 40 h on average weekly (N = 8), and had training in MH (N = 7). Few (N = 4) had work ex-perience > 20 years. Four themes emerged: (1) Roles and responsibilities—pharmacists play a vital role in medication management, clinical decision-making, and patient coun-selling; (2) satisfaction and positive impacts—a high job satisfaction derived from im-proved patient outcomes and effective multidisciplinary collaboration was reported; (3) challenges and barriers—stigma, role ambiguity, limited training in mental health, and in-stitutional challenges (workload, funding, etc.), were identified; participants also ex-pressed scepticism about the readiness of newly qualified prescriber pharmacists; (4) recommendations—participants advocated for enhanced MH content in pharmacy curric-ula, societal awareness and de-stigmatisation. Conclusion: Pharmacists viewed their role as integral to providing MH services; however, progress is impeded by challenges such as stigma, fragmented care, training gaps, and staffing shortages. It seemed unclear at the moment how the new prescriber-ready pharmacists will contribute to services. Additional findings from primary-care settings would provide a collective account of the current roles of pharmacists and their potential in MH.

Item Type:Article
Refereed:Yes
Divisions:Life Sciences > School of Chemistry, Food and Pharmacy > School of Pharmacy > Pharmacy Practice Research Group
ID Code:124808
Publisher:MDPI

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