Alshahrani AF, Dighriri IM. Patients' Satisfaction With Medication Delivery Pharmacy Services in a Tertiary Hospital in Asir, Saudi Arabia: A Cross-Sectional Study.
Cureus 2023;
15:e48903. [PMID:
38106798 PMCID:
PMC10725249 DOI:
10.7759/cureus.48903]
[Citation(s) in RCA: 0] [Impact Index Per Article: 0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Key Words] [Track Full Text] [Figures] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Accepted: 11/16/2023] [Indexed: 12/19/2023] Open
Abstract
BACKGROUND
Pharmaceutical care plays a crucial role in optimizing medication administration and improving patient health outcomes. However, medication adherence remains a challenge, with a significant percentage of patients discontinuing their medications. Value-added services (VASs), such as medication delivery, have been introduced to enhance pharmacy services and medication adherence.
OBJECTIVE
This study aims to evaluate satisfaction with a new medication delivery service at an Armed Forces Hospital outpatient pharmacy in Saudi Arabia and identify factors impacting utilization.
METHODS
A cross-sectional survey assessed patient satisfaction with a new pharmacy delivery service between January 2023 and March 2023. The target population consisted of adult patients who had used the pharmacy delivery service for at least one month. The survey contained 23 Likert scale questions assessing satisfaction across three domains: delivery process/personnel, medication quality, and pharmacist adherence to best practices.
RESULTS
A total of 110 patients responded to the survey, 383 invited patients; the mean age was 51.2 ± 15.3, and most were male 92 (83.6%), married 97 (88.2%), and living in urban areas 63 (57.3%). The overall satisfaction rate was 97 (88.1%), with 67 (60.9%) reporting satisfaction with the medication delivery service. On the delivery process/personnel items, over half strongly agreed that the delivery person called before arriving 59 (53.6%), medications were received on time 58 (51.8%), and the delivery person was polite 64 (58.2%). Most strongly agreed that the service helped with adherence 70 (63.6%) and saved travel costs 72 (65.5%) for medication-quality items. Most also strongly agreed that medications were properly packaged 65 (59.1%) and labeled 71 (64.5%). Regarding pharmacist practices, approximately 56 (50.9%) strongly agreed that the pharmacist provided education materials, inquired about adherence 49 (44.5%), and was respectful 55 (50%). Bivariate analyses found no significant associations between satisfaction and age, gender, residence, education, marital status, income, or disease (all p > 0.05). Satisfaction remained uniformly high across subgroups.
CONCLUSION
The medication delivery service demonstrated excellent patient reception regardless of its characteristics. Overall satisfaction with these services was high. There was no association between sociodemographic characteristics and the level of satisfaction. Continued monitoring and refinement could maximize the quality of pharmaceutical care afforded through innovative models supporting medication adherence.
Collapse