Knowledge and attitude of Iranian community pharmacists about the pharmaceutical care for epileptic females | Sabzghabaee | Pakistan Journal of Medical Sciences Old Website
 

Knowledge and attitude of Iranian community pharmacists about the pharmaceutical care for epileptic females

Ali Mohammad Sabzghabaee, Behzad Zolfaghari, Mohsen Haghir Ebrahimabadi, Rasool Soltani

Abstract


Objective: This study was designed to evaluate the knowledge and attitude of a cohort of Iranian community pharmacists about the pharmaceutical care indexes and drug therapy in female epileptic patients. 
Methodology: This cross-sectional study was conducted in Iran (2011) and one hundred and twenty two community pharmacists were randomly selected using clustering method for sampling. A self-administered questionnaire which was originally made by a clinical pharmacy focus group was used. This questionnaire had 10 true/false questions for knowledge assessing (Spearman-Brown coefficient, 0.65) and 19 attitude statements (with Likert scale) about the intention of pharmacists for providing pharmaceutical care for epileptic females (Croanbach’s alpha, 0.802). Face and content validity for both parts of the questionnaire were performed before the study.
Results: There was a significant inverse relationship between pharmacists’ knowledge on pharmaceutical care for epileptic females and the time elapsed from their graduation date. Considering the minimum passing score of 5, 85% of pharmacists did not have enough knowledge. The range of pharmacists’ attitude scores was 35 to 64 and its mean was 46.09. Regarding the minimum passing score of 45, 63.3% of pharmacists had positive attitude to AEDs in epileptic females. 
Conclusion: It seems that the pharmaceutical care for epileptic females is a missing part of Pharmacy education. It is highly recommended to pay special attention to this topic in continuing education programs for Iranian pharmacists.

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