Privacy and confidentiality: perspectives of mental health consumers and carers in pharmacy settings

Objectives - The study aims to explore within the community pharmacy practice context the views of mental health stakeholders on: (1) current and past experiences of privacy, confidentiality and support; and (2) expectations and needs in relation to privacy and confidentiality. Methods - In-depth in...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Hattingh, H. Laetitia, Knox, K., Fejzic, J., McConnell, D., Fowler, J., Mey, A., Kelly, F., Wheeler, A.
Format: Journal Article
Published: John Wiley & Sons Ltd 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/35765
_version_ 1848754584863899648
author Hattingh, H. Laetitia
Knox, K.
Fejzic, J.
McConnell, D.
Fowler, J.
Mey, A.
Kelly, F.
Wheeler, A.
author_facet Hattingh, H. Laetitia
Knox, K.
Fejzic, J.
McConnell, D.
Fowler, J.
Mey, A.
Kelly, F.
Wheeler, A.
author_sort Hattingh, H. Laetitia
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description Objectives - The study aims to explore within the community pharmacy practice context the views of mental health stakeholders on: (1) current and past experiences of privacy, confidentiality and support; and (2) expectations and needs in relation to privacy and confidentiality. Methods - In-depth interviews and focus groups were conducted in three states in Australia, namely Queensland, the northern region of New South Wales and Western Australia, between December 2011 and March 2012. Key findings - There were 98 participants consisting of consumers and carers (n=74), health professionals (n=13) and representatives from consumer organisations (n=11). Participants highlighted a need for improved staff awareness. Consumers indicated a desire to receive information in a way that respects their privacy and confidentiality, in an appropriate space. Areas identified that require improved protection of privacy and confidentiality during pharmacy interactions were the number of staff having access to sensitive information, workflow models causing information exposure and pharmacies' layout not facilitating private discussions. Challenges experienced by carers created feelings of isolation which could impact on care. Conclusions - This study explored mental health stakeholders' experiences and expectations regarding privacy and confidentiality in the Australian community pharmacy context. A need for better pharmacy staff training about the importance of privacy and confidentiality and strategies to enhance compliance with national pharmacy practice requirements was identified. Findings provided insight into privacy and confidentiality needs and will assist in the development of pharmacy staff training material to better support consumers with sensitive conditions.
first_indexed 2025-11-14T08:42:44Z
format Journal Article
id curtin-20.500.11937-35765
institution Curtin University Malaysia
institution_category Local University
last_indexed 2025-11-14T08:42:44Z
publishDate 2015
publisher John Wiley & Sons Ltd
recordtype eprints
repository_type Digital Repository
spelling curtin-20.500.11937-357652019-02-19T05:36:13Z Privacy and confidentiality: perspectives of mental health consumers and carers in pharmacy settings Hattingh, H. Laetitia Knox, K. Fejzic, J. McConnell, D. Fowler, J. Mey, A. Kelly, F. Wheeler, A. mental health confidentiality privacy pharmacy space Objectives - The study aims to explore within the community pharmacy practice context the views of mental health stakeholders on: (1) current and past experiences of privacy, confidentiality and support; and (2) expectations and needs in relation to privacy and confidentiality. Methods - In-depth interviews and focus groups were conducted in three states in Australia, namely Queensland, the northern region of New South Wales and Western Australia, between December 2011 and March 2012. Key findings - There were 98 participants consisting of consumers and carers (n=74), health professionals (n=13) and representatives from consumer organisations (n=11). Participants highlighted a need for improved staff awareness. Consumers indicated a desire to receive information in a way that respects their privacy and confidentiality, in an appropriate space. Areas identified that require improved protection of privacy and confidentiality during pharmacy interactions were the number of staff having access to sensitive information, workflow models causing information exposure and pharmacies' layout not facilitating private discussions. Challenges experienced by carers created feelings of isolation which could impact on care. Conclusions - This study explored mental health stakeholders' experiences and expectations regarding privacy and confidentiality in the Australian community pharmacy context. A need for better pharmacy staff training about the importance of privacy and confidentiality and strategies to enhance compliance with national pharmacy practice requirements was identified. Findings provided insight into privacy and confidentiality needs and will assist in the development of pharmacy staff training material to better support consumers with sensitive conditions. 2015 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/35765 10.1111/ijpp.12114 John Wiley & Sons Ltd fulltext
spellingShingle mental health
confidentiality
privacy
pharmacy space
Hattingh, H. Laetitia
Knox, K.
Fejzic, J.
McConnell, D.
Fowler, J.
Mey, A.
Kelly, F.
Wheeler, A.
Privacy and confidentiality: perspectives of mental health consumers and carers in pharmacy settings
title Privacy and confidentiality: perspectives of mental health consumers and carers in pharmacy settings
title_full Privacy and confidentiality: perspectives of mental health consumers and carers in pharmacy settings
title_fullStr Privacy and confidentiality: perspectives of mental health consumers and carers in pharmacy settings
title_full_unstemmed Privacy and confidentiality: perspectives of mental health consumers and carers in pharmacy settings
title_short Privacy and confidentiality: perspectives of mental health consumers and carers in pharmacy settings
title_sort privacy and confidentiality: perspectives of mental health consumers and carers in pharmacy settings
topic mental health
confidentiality
privacy
pharmacy space
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/35765