To evaluate the impact of pharmacists led intervention programme in order to evaluate knowledge, attitude and practice among Hepatitis B patients in Pakistan. METHODS: A non clinical randomized control trial was conducted whereby Hepatitis-B patients received an educational intervention through trained hospital pharmacists who provided them with information about Hepatitis-B. Knowledge, attitude and practice were measured by means of selfadministered questionnaire. Descriptive statistics were used to describe the demographic characteristics of the patients. Inferential statistics (Chi square test, and Mann-Whitney U test) were used for comparison between the groups. SPSS 17 was used for data analysis. RESULTS: Three hundred and ninety Hepatitis-B patients were randomly assigned to the study (195 patients in the control group and in the intervention group). No significant differences were observed in either group for mean age, gender, education, occupation, income and locality. A significant improvement (p<0.001) in the knowledge, attitude and practice (8.48±2.7, 3.87±1.2, 2.37±1.0 to 15.46±2.2, 5.05±1.0, 5.98±1.2) was observed in the interventional group. Significant difference (p<0.001) was observed after the completion of the intervention programme between the control group and in the intervention group. CONCLUSIONS: The pharmacist-led intervention caused a significant improvement in knowledge, attitude and practice scores of Hepatitis-B patients which will be helpful in the better disease management and control. It is recommended that the role of pharmacists in patient education must be acknowledged as an integral part of the health care system.
challenges. Self-administered questionnaires were used and data were analyzed with SPSS version 16. Results: The mean age was 16.9 ± SD 2.5 and 21 (62%) were mainly females and in school. Four were in primary school, 14 in junior secondary school, 12 in senior secondary and another 4 in tertiary institutions. Most (85%) were aware that young people their age could fall sick, 91% had heard of HIV, 70% knew someone with HIV and 45 % thought that adolescents were not at risk of HIV. Eighteen (52.9%) knew their HIV status, 17 (50%) were on antiretroviral and 32% of these admitted to missing Anti-Retroviral (ARVs) dose. ConClusions: Disclosure of HIV status to adolescents and young people is dependent on a complex mix of factors and most practitioners recommend an age and developmentally appropriate disclosure. The knowledge and awareness of HIV was 91%. There is also the need to support care givers to disclose HIV status and to support young people to adhere to ARVs for better outcomes.objeCtives: The health care system of Ukraine is being transformed according to the modern world format. More and more doctors are aware of the need for the use of technologies based on evidence-based medicine, particularly in the management of hepatitis C. Methods: In 2013 the multidisciplinary working group involving professionals and patients developed an adapted clinical guideline, based on HTAs and strategies of evidence-based medicine on the treatment of hepatitis C, and unified clinical protocol "Viral hepatitis C". Results: The differences in the treatment of hepatitis C in Ukraine compared to the best international practice were revealed and considered while developing medical and technological documents for health care in hepatitis C. Doctors and the public were informed of modern evidence-based technologies concerning management of the hepatitis C. As a result, the multidisciplinary working group adapted these documents of best methodological quality. Introduction of these documents reorients doctors on a modern approach to the assessment of scientific medical information. The unified clinical protocol contains provisions for minimum acceptable quality of primary and specialized medical care and the algorithms of patient's identification. ConClusions: Provision of changes in the current medical practice is associated with the introduction of modern medical technologies based on evidence-based medicine. Ukraine has implemented the algorithm for the use of best practice: a multidisciplinary working group adapts clinical guidelines based on evidence → creates unified clinical protocols → each health institution develops local protocols, taking into account the resources of a health facility and interaction of these institutions.
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