Difficulties in Accessing Medication Records at the Time of a Large-Scale Disaster

Author:

Ueno FumihikoORCID,Murakami Keiko,Nagai Masato,Matsubara Hiroko,Oonuma Tomomi,Matsuzaki Fumiko,Noda Aoi,Ishikuro Mami,Obara Taku,Kuriyama Shinichi

Abstract

Abstract Objective: In a large-scale disaster, medical professionals need to access medication records and provide medicines to people who cannot return home to take their daily medicines. We investigated the proportion of carrying the paper notebook or availability of the smartphone application of the medication record among people who are assumed to have difficulty in taking their medicines during large-scale disasters. Methods: In Japan, a web-based survey was conducted in 2018 by randomly selecting adults ≥ 20 years of age. Results: There were 2286 medication record owners in 3082 participants. Of the medication record owners, 784 (34.3%) took medicines that could not be missed for even a day. Among them, 724 used paper notebooks alone, 26 used smartphone applications alone, and 34 used both. Among the 724, 208 (28.8%) always carried a paper notebook. Among the 26, 16 (61.5%) could use their applications anytime. Therefore, among the 784, at least 560 (71.4%) could not always access their medication information. Conclusions: An awareness campaign to carry paper notebooks and install applications for medication records should be held, since only a limited number of people carry their medication records and always have access to their medication information.

Publisher

Cambridge University Press (CUP)

Subject

Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health

Reference10 articles.

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2. 5. Ministry of Health, Labor, and Welfare. Handling of prescription drugs in the event of the 2011 earthquake off the pacific coast of Tohoku (Request for notification to medical institutions and pharmacies) [Translated from Japanese]. Published March 12, 2011. https://www.mhlw.go.jp/stf/houdou/2r985200000163yl.html. Accessed December 14, 2020.

3. 6. Japan Pharmaceutical Association. Examples of the use of the Medication Handbook during the Great East Japan Earthquake [Translated from Japanese]. Published June 2012. https://www.nichiyaku.or.jp/assets/uploads/activities/shinsai_techo.pdf. Accessed December 14, 2020.

4. Defining pharmacists’ roles in disasters: a Delphi study;Watson;PLoS One.,2019

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