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Evaluation of attitudes, perceptions, and barriers to pharmaceutical care: insights from PharmD interns in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia: A cross-sectional study

Medicine (Baltimore). 2026 May 1;105(18):e48146. doi: 10.1097/MD.0000000000048146.

ABSTRACT

Pharmaceutical Care (PC) has emerged as a vital component of the healthcare system, involving the provision of medication therapy to achieve specific outcomes that enhance a patient’s quality of life. Therefore, this study aims to evaluate PharmD interns’ self-reported attitudes, perceptions of the skills required to provide PC using multiple domains (technical, psychosocial, communication, and administrative aspects) and perceived barriers to implementing PC, and recommendations. A cross-sectional study was conducted between May and December 2023, utilizing pretested questionnaires with PharmD interns at Saudi universities in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. The questionnaire included sociodemographic information, attitudes (13 items), perceptions (24 items), importance (19 items), barriers (17 items) toward PC, and recommendations (4 items). To find out the association between variables chi-square, Analysis of Variance, and Spearman correlation were used to examine differences in perceptions and correlations between attitude and perception scores, with a P value < .05 considered statistically significant. A total of 216 PharmD interns participated, with 59.7% being male, 94.9% Saudi nationals, and a mean age of 24.08 ± 0.98 years. The majority (72.7%) were 24 years old. Participants were from public (57.9%) and private (42.1%) universities in Riyadh. The mean attitude score towards PC was 51.25 ± 9.38, and the mean perception score was 106.67 ± 16.01. Attitude scores were significantly associated with gender and university type (P < .001), while perception scores showed significant associations with gender, age, and university type (P < .01). The results of the Spearman correlation analysis indicated a moderate, statistically significant positive correlation between mean attitude and mean perception scores (R = 0.345, P < .01). Most interns agreed that pharmacists should prevent and solve medication-related problems (86.6%) and provide PC (85.7%). However, 43.5% believed that PC is not worth the additional workload. The most frequently reported barriers were lack of financial compensation (65.8%), inadequate staffing (62.5%), limited private counseling areas (60.7%). Most of the PharmD interns have a positive attitude towards PC but face structural and educational barriers to PC implementation. Future research should focus on overcoming these barriers and promoting Interprofessional healthcare courses to enhance patient outcomes.

PMID:42065214 | DOI:10.1097/MD.0000000000048146

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