Pharmacist Opportunities to Improve Public Self-Medicating Practices in the UAE

Hasan, Sanah and Farghadani, Ghazaleh and Khalid AlHaideri, Salaa and Abdelraouf Fathy, Mohamed (2016) Pharmacist Opportunities to Improve Public Self-Medicating Practices in the UAE. Pharmacology & Pharmacy, 07 (11). pp. 459-471. ISSN 2157-9423

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Abstract

Objective: Self-treatment is an important aspect of self-care and one of the vital issues under debate in health care. Self-medication patterns vary among different populations and are influenced by many factors. The objective was to investigate the nature of self-medication behavior among the general public in the UAE and to explore public attitudes, beliefs, and level of knowledge concerning self-medication. Methods: A purposive sample of individuals involved in self-medication who belong to different age, gender, income, education level and health-seeking behaviors. A qualitative approach through individual face-to-face interviews was utilized to investigate participants’ behaviors and attitudes towards self-medication; factors influencing decision to self medicate, sources of information on medications, types of conditions for which self-medication is sought and types of medications used. Participant recruitment continued until theme saturation using content analysis. Findings: Three themes emerged from the data: Reasons for self-medication such as costs associated with visiting a doctor, convenience in visiting a pharmacy and perception of simplicity of the condition; Sources of information: pharmacists as a main source in addition to medication leaflets, family role and previous use, and medicines and medicines’ use: medicines’ use in chronic disease, use of antibiotics, use of herbals and supplements and medicines’ use in children. Conclusion: Findings from this study indicate that self-medication behaviors are common among the population due to several reasons. Inappropriate self-medication practices are evident and may compromise patient care outcomes. Pharmacists play a vital role in intervening to optimize the use of medications and patient education regarding self-care.

Item Type: Article
Subjects: STM One > Chemical Science
Depositing User: Unnamed user with email support@stmone.org
Date Deposited: 17 Feb 2023 05:09
Last Modified: 01 Jul 2025 11:06
URI: http://note.send2pub.com/id/eprint/329

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