Digital screens in community pharmacy for public health messaging; a mixed-methods study

Author:

Ashcroft Naomi1,Cooper Matthew12,Nazar Hamde12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. School of Pharmacy, Newcastle University , Newcastle-upon-Tyne, NE1 7RU , United Kingdom

2. National Institute for Health and Care Research Newcastle Patient Safety Research Collaborative, Newcastle University , Newcastle-upon-Tyne , United Kingdom

Abstract

Abstract Objectives An independent evaluation was undertaken to investigate the perceived impact of installing digital screens in a group of community pharmacies as an approach to provide public health messaging. Methods Community pharmacy staff were interviewed prior to screen installation to investigate experience and perceptions of conventional public health campaigns using written materials. Staff were interviewed after the digital screen installation to investigate their opinions of the installation and its impact on public health delivery in the pharmacy. Patients and public representatives were recruited to visit the pharmacies and asked to complete a survey about what they observed and thought about the public health messaging. Interviews were transcribed verbatim and thematically analysed. Surveys consisted of open, closed, and rating questions. The results of which were descriptively analysed. Key findings Community pharmacy staff found paper-based campaigns work-intensive and created paper wastage. The digital screen installation was received positively by pharmacy staff and patient, and public representatives found them eye-catching and engaging. Staff were unable to report any conversations with members of the public triggered by the screens, but the patient and public volunteers were able to recall some of the health messages. Conclusions Digital messaging is common practice and digital screens are already in use in areas where patients and the public have conventionally been in attendance, e.g. GP surgeries. Digital screens in community pharmacy for public health messaging could be considered an inevitable progression for public health messaging given concerns about wastage and up-to-date information. The impact, however, on triggering healthier choices and lifestyles requires further investigation.

Funder

Northeast and North Cumbria Academic Health Sciences Network

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Reference21 articles.

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3. Impact of information leaflets on behavior of patients with gastroenteritis or tonsillitis: a cluster randomized trial in French primary care;Sustersic;J Gen Intern Med,2013

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