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Evaluation of naloxone furnishing community pharmacies in San Francisco

Abstract

Objectives

In 2017, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported more than 47,600 deaths as a result of opioid overdose in the United States. In an effort to reduce these deaths, California passed legislation providing pharmacists with the ability to furnish naloxone without a prescription. Our study examined pharmacies in San Francisco that furnished naloxone and provided guidance for pharmacies seeking to develop similar programs. The study aims were to (1) identify the legal, structural, social-environmental, and financial components of a pharmacy model that allows for successful naloxone distribution, (2) evaluate the attitudes and beliefs of pharmacy staff members toward patients receiving or requesting naloxone, and (3) assess relationships between these attitudes and beliefs and naloxone furnishing at the pharmacy.

Methods

This cross-sectional study used a series of semistructured interviews of pharmacy staff in San Francisco conducted April-October 2019. Through a thematic, inductive analysis of collected data, emerging themes were mapped to the primary study aims.

Results

We interviewed 14 pharmacists and pharmacy technicians at 4 community pharmacies. We identified 4 factors for success in implementing a naloxone furnishing protocol: administrative-led efforts, pharmacist-led efforts, increasing pharmacist engagement, and increasing patient engagement. The respondents also discussed the approaches they used to overcome previously identified barriers: cost, time, expectations of unwanted clientele, and patients' feelings of stigma.

Conclusion

Pharmacists' approaches to implementing naloxone furnishing had common features across locations, suggesting many of these strategies could be replicated in other community pharmacies.

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