Implications of Direct Healthcare Professional Communication in Egypt: barriers and preferences of Health Care Professionals

Direct Healthcare Professional Communication (DHPC) is essentially distributed for fast communication of new serious drug safety information to healthcare professionals (HCPs). However, the use of this tool concerning the knowledge and preferences of HCPs has never been evaluated in Egypt. This stud...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Mai A Faied, Lamia El Wakeel, Amr Abd el rahman Saad, Nagwa Ali Sabri
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Ain Shams University 2019-12-01
Series: Archives of Pharmaceutical Sciences Ain Shams University
Subjects:
Online Access:https://aps.journals.ekb.eg/article_63652.html
id doaj-e946bb6237b7499690a4e2f3eaf39b40
record_format Article
spelling doaj-e946bb6237b7499690a4e2f3eaf39b402020-11-25T02:14:57ZengAin Shams University Archives of Pharmaceutical Sciences Ain Shams University2356-83802356-83992019-12-0132268276https://dx.doi.org/10.21608/aps.2019.15297.1007 Implications of Direct Healthcare Professional Communication in Egypt: barriers and preferences of Health Care ProfessionalsMai A Faied0Lamia El Wakeel1Amr Abd el rahman Saad2Nagwa Ali Sabri3The Egyptian Pharmaceutical Vigilance Center, Central Administration for Pharmaceutical Affairs, Ministry of Health, Cairo, EgypDepartment of Clinical Pharmacy, Faculty of Pharmacy Ain Shams University, Cairo, EgyptThe National Organization for Drug Control And Research (NODCAR), Cairo, Egypt.Department of Clinical Pharmacy, Faculty of Pharmacy Ain Shams University, Cairo, EgyptDirect Healthcare Professional Communication (DHPC) is essentially distributed for fast communication of new serious drug safety information to healthcare professionals (HCPs). However, the use of this tool concerning the knowledge and preferences of HCPs has never been evaluated in Egypt. This study aimed to evaluate the HCPs' knowledge, preferences, and barriers to the use of DHPC in Egypt. A cross-sectional study of a random sample of 254 HCPs surveyed via face-to-face interviews to assess the Egyptian HCPs' awareness of DHPC, the preferences, and barriers that affect its use. Among the 297 approached HCPs, only 254 accepted to participate with a response rate of 85.5%, including (50% internists, 22.83% cardiologists, 11.02% neurologists, 11.02% pediatricians, and 5.12% from other specialties). Most HCPs were not familiar with DHPC (N= 254, 61.8%). One-third of the visited HCPs who were aware of concerned drugs' risk(s) got their information from DHPC (N= 149, 36.9%). HCPs preference for communication channel was highest for meetings (N= 254, 65.7%) and least for newsletters (N= 254, 28%). HCPs reported barriers to reading DHPC included; busy schedule (N= 254, 47.6%), mistrusted source (N= 254, 24.4%), view as a marketing tool (N= 254, 21.7%), invaluable information (N= 254, 9.8%) and disbelief (N= 254, 7.5%). The DHPC did not reach the target HCPs most of the time, but when received, it was successful in conveying the required message to the target HCPs. Multiple barriers were identified that negatively impacted the success of DHPC. It is recommended to use other electronic communication methods to enhance the reachability of the current method (DHPC).https://aps.journals.ekb.eg/article_63652.htmldirectcommunicationhealthcareprofessional
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Mai A Faied
Lamia El Wakeel
Amr Abd el rahman Saad
Nagwa Ali Sabri
spellingShingle Mai A Faied
Lamia El Wakeel
Amr Abd el rahman Saad
Nagwa Ali Sabri
Implications of Direct Healthcare Professional Communication in Egypt: barriers and preferences of Health Care Professionals
Archives of Pharmaceutical Sciences Ain Shams University
direct
communication
healthcare
professional
author_facet Mai A Faied
Lamia El Wakeel
Amr Abd el rahman Saad
Nagwa Ali Sabri
author_sort Mai A Faied
title Implications of Direct Healthcare Professional Communication in Egypt: barriers and preferences of Health Care Professionals
title_short Implications of Direct Healthcare Professional Communication in Egypt: barriers and preferences of Health Care Professionals
title_full Implications of Direct Healthcare Professional Communication in Egypt: barriers and preferences of Health Care Professionals
title_fullStr Implications of Direct Healthcare Professional Communication in Egypt: barriers and preferences of Health Care Professionals
title_full_unstemmed Implications of Direct Healthcare Professional Communication in Egypt: barriers and preferences of Health Care Professionals
title_sort implications of direct healthcare professional communication in egypt: barriers and preferences of health care professionals
publisher Ain Shams University
series Archives of Pharmaceutical Sciences Ain Shams University
issn 2356-8380
2356-8399
publishDate 2019-12-01
description Direct Healthcare Professional Communication (DHPC) is essentially distributed for fast communication of new serious drug safety information to healthcare professionals (HCPs). However, the use of this tool concerning the knowledge and preferences of HCPs has never been evaluated in Egypt. This study aimed to evaluate the HCPs' knowledge, preferences, and barriers to the use of DHPC in Egypt. A cross-sectional study of a random sample of 254 HCPs surveyed via face-to-face interviews to assess the Egyptian HCPs' awareness of DHPC, the preferences, and barriers that affect its use. Among the 297 approached HCPs, only 254 accepted to participate with a response rate of 85.5%, including (50% internists, 22.83% cardiologists, 11.02% neurologists, 11.02% pediatricians, and 5.12% from other specialties). Most HCPs were not familiar with DHPC (N= 254, 61.8%). One-third of the visited HCPs who were aware of concerned drugs' risk(s) got their information from DHPC (N= 149, 36.9%). HCPs preference for communication channel was highest for meetings (N= 254, 65.7%) and least for newsletters (N= 254, 28%). HCPs reported barriers to reading DHPC included; busy schedule (N= 254, 47.6%), mistrusted source (N= 254, 24.4%), view as a marketing tool (N= 254, 21.7%), invaluable information (N= 254, 9.8%) and disbelief (N= 254, 7.5%). The DHPC did not reach the target HCPs most of the time, but when received, it was successful in conveying the required message to the target HCPs. Multiple barriers were identified that negatively impacted the success of DHPC. It is recommended to use other electronic communication methods to enhance the reachability of the current method (DHPC).
topic direct
communication
healthcare
professional
url https://aps.journals.ekb.eg/article_63652.html
work_keys_str_mv AT maiafaied implicationsofdirecthealthcareprofessionalcommunicationinegyptbarriersandpreferencesofhealthcareprofessionals
AT lamiaelwakeel implicationsofdirecthealthcareprofessionalcommunicationinegyptbarriersandpreferencesofhealthcareprofessionals
AT amrabdelrahmansaad implicationsofdirecthealthcareprofessionalcommunicationinegyptbarriersandpreferencesofhealthcareprofessionals
AT nagwaalisabri implicationsofdirecthealthcareprofessionalcommunicationinegyptbarriersandpreferencesofhealthcareprofessionals
_version_ 1724898798069612544