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Mapping community pharmacy services in Brazil: a scoping review

Abstract

The delivery of clinical pharmacy services has been growing in Brazilian community pharmacies, and it is necessary to have a comprehensive understanding of the topic. This scoping review aimed to provide an overview of Brazilian studies about clinical pharmacy services in community pharmacies. Original research articles, with no restriction of time, study design, or patient’s health condition, were included. Searches were conducted in PubMed, Scopus, Web of Science, Scielo, and Lilacs. Two reviewers conducted the screening, full-text reading, and data extraction independently. ROB and ROBINS-I were used for the assessment of quality. Charts and tables were built to summarise the data. Seventy-two articles were included. A diversity of study designs, number of participants, terms used, and outcomes was found. São Paulo and Sergipe States had the highest number of studies (n=10). Pharmacists’ interventions were not fully reported in 65% of studies, and most studies presented an unclear risk of bias. Studies were very diverse, impairing the comparisons between the results and hindering their reproducibility. This review suggests using guidelines and checklists for better structuration of pharmacists’ interventions as well as reporting results and measuring fidelity in future research.

Keywords:
Community pharmacy services; Pharmacists; Pharmacy research; Terminology; Public Reporting of Healthcare Data

INTRODUCTION

The Brazilian health system comprises a complex network of healthcare providers that deliver free-of-charge services to the population through the Unified Health System (Sistema Único de Saúde - SUS) and can be complemented by private paid services from the Supplementary Health (Paim et al., 2011Paim J, Travassos C, Almeida C, Bahia L, MacInko J. The Brazilian health system: History, advances, and challenges. Lancet. 2011;377(9779):1778-97.; Silva, Fegadolli, 2020Silva BB, Fegadolli C. Implementation of pharmaceutical care for older adults in the brazilian public health system: a case study and realistic evaluation. BMC Health Serv Res . 2020;20(37):2-14.). SUS is a universal healthcare system organised according to levels of care (primary, secondary, and tertiary) depending on how specialised a service is (Paim et al., 2011Paim J, Travassos C, Almeida C, Bahia L, MacInko J. The Brazilian health system: History, advances, and challenges. Lancet. 2011;377(9779):1778-97.). Primary healthcare is designed to cover the whole country for the provision of ease-of-access general health practice. However, similarly to other countries, the system is fragmented, hindering the continuity of effective and qualified services to the population (Mendes, 2010Mendes EV. Health care networks. Cienc Saude Colet. 2010;15(5):2297-305.; Silva, Fegadolli, 2020Silva BB, Fegadolli C. Implementation of pharmaceutical care for older adults in the brazilian public health system: a case study and realistic evaluation. BMC Health Serv Res . 2020;20(37):2-14.). In attempt to overcome the Brazilian health system’s fragmentation, the organisation of healthcare networks was established in 2010, which is a set of actions to integrate logistical, technical, and management aspects to provide integral healthcare (Brasil, 2010Brasil. Ministério da Saúde. Portaria nº 4.279, de 30 dezembro de 2010. Estabelece diretrizes para a organização da Rede de Atenção à Saúde no âmbito do Sistema Único de Saúde (SUS). Diário Oficial da União , Poder Executivo, Brasília/DF , 2010. 31 dez. 2010. Seção 1, p. 89. Available from: http://bvsms.saude.gov.br/bvs/saudelegis/gm/2010/prt4279_30_12_2010.html.
http://bvsms.saude.gov.br/bvs/saudelegis...
). In this context, Brazilian pharmaceutical assistance has been developed for both logistical activities of access to medicines and the promotion of rational use of medicines through clinical pharmacy services (CFF, 2016aConselho Federal de Farmácia (CFF). Serviços farmacêuticos diretamente destinados ao paciente, à família e à comunidade: contextualização e arcabouço conceitual. 1a. Brasília: Conselho Federal de Farmácia ; 2016a.).

Clinical pharmacy services are healthcare activities developed by the pharmacist directly to the patient to optimise the medication use process and to help in the management of acute and chronic diseases (CFF, 2016aConselho Federal de Farmácia (CFF). Serviços farmacêuticos diretamente destinados ao paciente, à família e à comunidade: contextualização e arcabouço conceitual. 1a. Brasília: Conselho Federal de Farmácia ; 2016a.; Rotta et al., 2015bRotta I, Salgado TM, Silva ML, Correr CJ, Fernandez-Llimos F. Effectiveness of clinical pharmacy services: an overview of systematic reviews (2000-2010). Int J Clin Pharm . 2015b;37(5):687-97.). These services are considered ‘complex interventions’ because they comprise several intertwined elements, dynamically interacting with one another, to achieve the desirable health results (Clay et al., 2019Clay PG, Burns AL, Isetts BJ, Hirsch JD, Kliethermes MA, Planas LG. PaCIR: A tool to enhance pharmacist patient care intervention reporting. J Am Pharm Assoc . 2019;59(5):615-23.; Craig et al., 2008Craig P, Dieppe P, Macintyre S, Mitchie S, Nazareth I, Petticrew M. Developing and evaluating complex interventions: The new Medical Research Council guidance. BMJ. 2008;337:a1655:979-83.). All the components of structure and process of each clinical service must be clearly defined to guarantee their quality and reproducibility (Clay et al., 2019Clay PG, Burns AL, Isetts BJ, Hirsch JD, Kliethermes MA, Planas LG. PaCIR: A tool to enhance pharmacist patient care intervention reporting. J Am Pharm Assoc . 2019;59(5):615-23.; Rotta et al., 2015aRotta I, Salgado TM, Felix DC, Souza TT, Correr CJ, Fernandez-Llimos F. Ensuring consistent reporting of clinical pharmacy services to enhance reproducibility in practice: An improved version of DEPICT. J Eval Clin Pract. 2015a;21(4):584-90.).

The population can receive clinical pharmacy services in Brazilian community pharmacies, which are non-hospital, non-outpatient, patient care facilities, public or private, designed to assist the population in the provision and use of medications (Correr, Otuki, 2013Correr CJ, Otuki MF. A prática farmacêutica na farmácia comunitária. 1st ed. Porto Alegre: Artmed; 2013. 440p.). As community pharmacies are spread throughout the Brazilian territory, most patients have easy access to them, and they can be a strategic place for the development of healthcare (CFF, 2016aConselho Federal de Farmácia (CFF). Serviços farmacêuticos diretamente destinados ao paciente, à família e à comunidade: contextualização e arcabouço conceitual. 1a. Brasília: Conselho Federal de Farmácia ; 2016a.; Correr, Otuki, 2013Correr CJ, Otuki MF. A prática farmacêutica na farmácia comunitária. 1st ed. Porto Alegre: Artmed; 2013. 440p.; Leite et al., 2017Leite SN, Bernardo NLM da C, Álvares J, Guerra Junior AA, Costa EA, Acurcio F de A, et al. Medicine dispensing service in primary health care of SUS. Rev Saude Publica . 2017;51(2):1s-10s.).

Clinical pharmacy services have expanded recently in Brazil (CFF, 2016aConselho Federal de Farmácia (CFF). Serviços farmacêuticos diretamente destinados ao paciente, à família e à comunidade: contextualização e arcabouço conceitual. 1a. Brasília: Conselho Federal de Farmácia ; 2016a.) due to a combination of factors. First, there were relevant policy and legislation improvements related to pharmacists’ professional activities enacted by the Brazilian Pharmacy Federal Board (CFF, 2013aConselho Federal de Farmácia (CFF). Resolução no. 585, de 29 de agosto de 2013. Regulamenta as atribuições clínicas do farmacêutico e dá outras providências. Diário Oficial da União , Poder Executivo, Brasília/DF ; 2013a. Seção 1, p. 186-188. Available from: https://www.cff.org.br/userfiles/file/resolucoes/585.pdf.
https://www.cff.org.br/userfiles/file/re...
, 2013bConselho Federal de Farmácia (CFF). Resolução no. 586, de 29 de agosto de 2013. Regula a prescrição farmacêutica e dá outras providências. Diário Oficial da União , Poder Executivo, Brasília/DF ; 2013b. Seção 1, p. 136-138. Available from: https://www.cff.org.br/userfiles/file/resolucoes/586.pdf
https://www.cff.org.br/userfiles/file/re...
) and the National Health Agency (Brasil, 2009Brasil. Ministério da Saúde. Agência Nacional De Vigilância Sanitária. Resolução RDC no. 44, de 17 de agosto de 2009. Dispõe sobre boas práticas farmacêuticas para o controle sanitário do funcionamento, da dispensação e da comercialização de produtos e da prestação de serviços farmacêuticos em farmácias e drogarias e dá outras providências. Diário Oficial da União , Poder Executivo, Brasília/DF , 2009. Available from: http://bvsms.saude.gov.br/bvs/saudelegis/anvisa/2009/rdc0044_17_08_2009.html
http://bvsms.saude.gov.br/bvs/saudelegis...
, 2014Brasil. Lei no 13.021, de 08 de agosto de 2014. Dispõe sobre o controle sanitário do comércio de drogas, medicamentos, insumos farmacêuticos e correlatos. Diário Oficial da União, Poder Executivo, Brasília/DF, 2014. Available from: https://www2.camara.leg.br/legin/fed/lei/2014/lei-13021-8-agosto-2014-779151-normaatualizada-pl.pdf.
https://www2.camara.leg.br/legin/fed/lei...
). Second, there were governmental programmes providing upskill training for pharmacists and implementation of clinical pharmacy services in public community pharmacies (Brasil, 2012Brasil. Ministério da Saúde. Portaria no 1.214, de 13 de junho de 2012. Institui o Programa Nacional de Qualificação da Assistência Farmacêutica no âmbito do Sistema Único de Saúde (QUALIFAR-SUS). Diário Oficial da União , Poder Executivo Brasília/DF, 2012. Available from: http://bvsms.saude.gov.br/bvs/saudelegis/gm/2012/prt1214_13_06_2012.html
http://bvsms.saude.gov.br/bvs/saudelegis...
). Last, there has been a tendency of some private community pharmacy chains to increase the provision of clinical pharmacy services delivered (ABRAFARMA, 2017ABRAFARMA. Associação Brasileira de Redes de Farmácias e Drogarias. Uma nova era da saúde no país. Excelência. 2017;7(7):12-8. Available from: www.abrafarma.com.br.
www.abrafarma.com.br...
).

Along with this expanding scenario of clinical pharmacy services provision, important research has been conducted. It has been shown by some primary studies that medication dispensing is the most common clinical service delivered in Brazilian community pharmacies, while other clinical services, such as pharmacotherapy monitoring and follow-up of patients on medication, seem not to be fully consolidated yet (CFF, 2015Conselho Federal de Farmácia (CFF). Serafin C, Correia Júnior D, Vargas M. Perfil do farmacêutico no Brasil: relatório. Brasília: Conselho Federal de Farmácia; 2015. 44p. Available from: https://www.cff.org.br/userfiles/file/Perfil do farmacêutico no Brasil_web.pdf.
https://www.cff.org.br/userfiles/file/Pe...
; Leite et al., 2017Leite SN, Bernardo NLM da C, Álvares J, Guerra Junior AA, Costa EA, Acurcio F de A, et al. Medicine dispensing service in primary health care of SUS. Rev Saude Publica . 2017;51(2):1s-10s.; Oliveira et al., 2017Oliveira NVBV de, Szabo I, Bastos LL, Paiva SP. Atuação profissional dos farmacêuticos no brasil: perfil sociodemográfico e dinâmica de trabalho em farmácias e drogarias privadas. Saude Soc. 2017;26(4):1105-21.). However, unlike countries in Europe and North America, which concentrate most studies about clinical pharmacy services, including several literature reviews (Alhusein, Watson, 2019Alhusein N, Watson MC. Quality indicators and community pharmacy services: a scoping review. Int J Pharm Pract. 2019;27(6):490-500.; Costa et al., 2019Costa S, Cary M, Helling DK, Pereira J, Mateus C. An overview of systematic reviews of economic evaluations of pharmacy-based public health interventions: addressing methodological challenges. Syst Rev. 2019;8(272):1-20.; Rotta et al., 2017Rotta I, Souza TT, Salgado TM, Correr CJ, Fernandez-Llimos F. Characterization of published randomized controlled trials assessing clinical pharmacy services around the world. Res Soc Adm Pharm . 2017;13(1):201-8.), to the authors’ best knowledge, there are no secondary studies (i.e., literature review) in Brazil to date assessing Brazilian research on the topic. Therefore, it is timely and of great importance to have a comprehensive record of the state of the knowledge to both facilitate future research and support policy makers and pharmacy practice innovation in Brazil.

Based on the above-mentioned information, this scoping review aimed to provide an overview of Brazilian studies about clinical pharmacy services in community pharmacies. Furthermore, it also aimed to investigate how these services were structured and delivered, whether the evaluation of the intervention fidelity was measured, the terminology employed, the risk of bias (ROB), and the quality of the report of the pharmaceutical interventions performed.

METHODS

This scoping review was conducted according to the recommendations of The Joanna Briggs Institute (2015)The Joanna Briggs Institute. The Joanna Briggs Institute Reviewers’ Manual 2015. Adelaide, SA Australia: The Joanna Briggs Institute; 2015: 24p. for scoping reviews, and a protocol was developed (available at: https://osf.io/c49nj/). The PRISMA-ScR Checklist - Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analysis extension for Scoping Reviews (Tricco et al., 2018Tricco AC, Lillie E, Zarin W, O’Brien KK, Colquhoun H, Levac D, et al. PRISMA extension for scoping reviews (PRISMA-ScR): Checklist and explanation. Ann Intern Med. 2018;169(7):467-73.) was used for reporting results, and it is available in Supplementary Material 1.

Eligibility criteria

Original research articles, with no restrictions of publication date or study design, that evaluated the effect of clinical pharmacy services provided in Brazil to individual patients and reporting health outcomes or process indicators were included. All types of clinical pharmacy services delivered directly by the pharmacist or under his direct supervision were included, in public or private community pharmacies, and without restriction of participants’ socio-demographic characteristics or health conditions. Reviews, guidelines, protocols, unpublished studies, conference proceedings, and articles written in non-Roman characters were excluded. Studies with interventions addressed to a group of patients with no report of individual outcomes, interventions performed along with a multi-disciplinary healthcare team or where the role of the pharmacist was not specifically described, and non-Brazilian studies were also excluded. As recommended for scoping reviews, no study was excluded based on methodological quality.

Information sources and study selection

Searches were done without time limit in the following databases: PubMed, Scopus, Web of Science, Scielo, and Lilacs (last update: November 2020). Additionally, manual searches were performed in Google Scholar and in the Brazilian bibliography database Portal de Periódicos CAPES/MEC. Search strategies used a combination of the following keywords: ‘community pharmacy services’, ‘pharmaceutical services’, ‘clinical pharmacy’, ‘pharmacist intervention’, ‘pharmacist’, and ‘Brazil’. Complete search strategies are available in Supplementary Material 2. All articles retrieved were imported to a reference manager, duplicates were removed, and then two researchers (AAG and IM) independently screened titles and abstracts based on the inclusion criteria. In a second stage, full-text articles were independently evaluated by these two researchers. Discrepancies were conciliated in a discussion meeting using a third researcher as referee (AB).

Data extraction and charting process

Data of the finally included articles were extracted independently in duplicate (AAG and IM) using a form developed according to the objectives of this scoping review. The extracted data were authors, year of publication, city/state where the study was conducted, study design, number of participants, nature of community pharmacy (i.e., private or public), type of clinical pharmacy service and its characteristics, terms used to describe the service, outcomes or processes evaluated, and conceptual framework used. Grouping of the services with similar characteristics was done based on the descriptions extracted from the studies in comparison with the Brazilian Pharmacy Federal Board (Conselho Federal de Farmácia - CFF) recommendations (CFF, 2016aConselho Federal de Farmácia (CFF). Serviços farmacêuticos diretamente destinados ao paciente, à família e à comunidade: contextualização e arcabouço conceitual. 1a. Brasília: Conselho Federal de Farmácia ; 2016a.). A narrative synthesis of the extracted information was performed. When possible, data were summarised using descriptive statistics, including percentages as appropriate, and tables were built.

Quality of the studies

As part of the mapping of this scoping review, a quality analysis of the included studies was done to critically evaluate their limitations but not to produce evidence or conclusions. Cochrane Collaboration tools were used: ROB (The Cochrane Collaboration, 2008The Cochrane Collaboration. Cochrane Handbook for Systematic Reviews of Interventions. Higgins J, Green S, editors. Cochrane handbook for systematic reviews of interventions. Chichester, West Sussex, England: Wiley-Blackwell; 2008.) was used for the randomised controlled trials (RCT), and the Risk of Bias in Non-randomised Studies of Interventions (ROBINS-I) (Sterne et al., 2016Sterne J, Hernán M, Reeves B, Savović J, Berkman N, Viswanathan M, et al. Risk Of Bias In Non-randomized Studies of Interventions (ROBINS-I): detailed guidance. BMJ. 2016;355:i4919.) was used for other study designs. We decided to use ROB and ROBINS-I to keep a minimum number of tools in order to avoid heterogeneity of data with comparisons between the results of different tools that could hinder reliable conclusions. Because of the wide variability of study designs, both tools were adapted according to the nature of intervention of the clinical pharmacy services and outcomes according to Tonin et al. (2019Tonin FS, Lopes LA, Rotta I, Bonetti AF, Pontarolo R, Correr CJ, et al. Usability and sensitivity of the risk of bias assessment tool for randomized controlled trials of pharmacist interventions. Int J Clin Pharm . 2019;41(3):785-92.). RCT studies were classified as of low ROB in the blinding domain when authors reported efforts to guarantee blinding of all information as possible. A narrative analysis of the report of interventions was done considering the essential concepts and components of the DEPICT checklist (Rotta et al., 2015aRotta I, Salgado TM, Felix DC, Souza TT, Correr CJ, Fernandez-Llimos F. Ensuring consistent reporting of clinical pharmacy services to enhance reproducibility in practice: An improved version of DEPICT. J Eval Clin Pract. 2015a;21(4):584-90.), but an in-depth analysis with a systematic application of the instrument for each study was not done because it was out of the scope of this review.

RESULTS

After the removal of duplicates, 1,225 entries were found from the database search; 1,096 articles remained, and their titles and abstracts were screened. Finally, 129 full-text articles were evaluated for eligibility, and 72 were finally included for analysis. A manual search was also conducted, retrieving 115 articles, but after screening, no study was included. Figure 1 provides a flowchart of this scoping review. The data extracted are summarised in Table I, and the references of the included studies are available in Supplementary Material 3.

FIGURE 1
Flowchart of the literature selection for this scoping review.

TABLE I
Summary of the data from studies included in the scoping review

The 72 articles reported results from 61 different studies. These studies employed a wider variety of research designs. Most were observational studies (29/61; 47.5%: 21 cross-sectional, 3 cohort, 5 descriptive), followed by interventional studies (24/61; 39.3%: 4 RCT, 20 quasi-experimental), qualitative research (5/61; 8.2%), mixed-methods studies (2/61; 3.3%), and a two-phase study (cross-sectional and quasi-experimental) (1/61; 1.6%).

The number of participants in the studies had a wide variation from 10 to 8,803. Out of the 61 studies, 9.84% (6/61) were self-reported as pilot studies and included from 10 to 69 participants. The majority of interventional studies (n=19/24; 79%) included fewer than 100 participants in the intervention groups, ranging from 10 to 842; cross-sectional design studies included 4 to 8,803; descriptive studies had a variation from 69 to 1080; cohort studies from 83 to 240; mixed and qualitative studies included from 10 to 69; and the two-phase study included 1,057 participants.

The setting of these studies varied. Most were conducted in public community pharmacies in 38/61 studies (62.3%), and the others were performed in private community pharmacies. A great part of the studies (51/61; 83.6%) were conducted regionally, in a single community pharmacy, or in pharmacies from the same city. Only one large national study named PNAUM (National Research about Access, Use and Promotion of Medication Rational Use) was performed in 2015 in 120 major cities at public community pharmacies (Araújo et al., 2017Araújo P, Costa E, Guerra Junior A, Acurcio F, Guibu I, Álvares J, et al. Pharmaceutical care in Brazil’s primary health care. Rev Saude Publica. 2017;51:1s-11s.; Lima et al., 2017Lima MG, Álvares J, Guerra Junior AA, Costa EA, Guibu IA, Soeiro OM, et al. Indicators related to the rational use of medicines and its associated factors. Rev Saude Publica . 2017;51(suppl 2):23S.; Soeiro et al., 2017Soeiro OM, Tavares NUL, Nascimento JM do, Guerra AA, Costa EA, Acurcio F de A, et al. Patient satisfaction with pharmaceutical services in Brazilian primary health care. Rev Saude Publica . 2017;51( suppl 2):21s.). In this cross-sectional study, pharmacists and patients were interviewed to rise up the clinical activities developed by pharmacists to evaluate the satisfaction concerning dispensing and counselling, the access of the patients to the health system, and other pharmacy administrative issues.

Geographically, the studies were distributed unevenly across Brazil, with higher prevalence of the southeast with 39.3% (n=24/61) of the studies, followed by the south with 26.2% (n=16/61) and the northeast with 24.6% (n=15/61). Only one study involved more than one state. The most productive states were Sergipe and São Paulo, both with 10 studies, followed by Minas Gerais and Santa Catarina, both with 8 studies. Figure 2 shows the distribution of studies across Brazil and the number of universities with pharmacy courses in each state.

FIGURE 2
Geographic distribution of the studies and number of universities with pharmacy courses by state.

The research aim of these studies was also diverse. Fifteen out of 24 (62.5%) interventional studies evaluated patient outcomes from medication therapy management services, with a follow-up period from 6 to 36 months. Cross-sectional studies were addressed in most cases (18/21; 85.7%) to evaluate elements of the work processes of the pharmacist (i.e., communication skills, knowledge, information provided to patients in counselling, and therapeutic decisions) of dispensing and minor ailment management services. Qualitative (n=5) and mixed-methodology studies (n=2) were restricted to evaluate the perceptions of the pharmacists about their satisfaction, knowledge, and behaviour in providing clinical pharmacy services (dispensing and minor ailment management) and the barriers faced to the service implementation.

Out of the 61 studies, 36 (59%) reported outcomes - isolated or along with other elements of the medication use process. From the 36 reporting outcomes, 25 reported clinical, 19 humanistic, and 3 economic outcomes. Two studies reported all three outcomes, and seven studies reported two of them. Six studies (Dosea et al., 2017Dosea AS, Brito GC, Santos LM, Marques TC, Balisa-Rocha B, Pimentel D, et al. Establishment, implementation, and consolidation of clinical pharmacy services in community pharmacies: perceptions of a group of pharmacists. Qual Health Res. 2017;27(3):363-73.; França Filho et al., 2008França Filho JB, Correr CJ, Rossignoli P, Melchiors AC, Fernández-Llimós F, Pontarolo R. Perfil dos farmacêuticos e farmácias em Santa Catarina: indicadores de estrutura e processo. Rev Bras Ciências Farm. 2008;44(1):105-13.; Franceschet, Farias, 2005Franceschet I, Farias MR. Investigação do perfil dos farmacêuticos e das atividades desenvolvidas em farmácias do setor privado no município de Florianópolis, Santa Catarina, Brasil. Acta Farm Bonaer. 2005;24(4):590-7.; Halila et al., 2015Halila GC, Junior EH, Otuki MF, Correr CJ. The practice of OTC counseling by community pharmacists in Parana, Brazil. Pharm Pract . 2015;13(4):1-8.; Hipólito Júnior et al., 2017Hipólito Júnior E, Halila GC, Christini W, Reis T, Guimarães MM, Guanaes LD, et al. Quality indicators of pharmacists’ services in community pharmacies in Paraná State, Brazil. Braz J Pharm Sci . 2017;53(1):1-9.; Reis et al., 2015Reis TM, Rocha KSS, Barros IMC, Santos LMC, Paixão FP, Almeida FHO, et al. Pharmacists’ Skills in Conducting Clinical Services in Community Pharmacies in Urban Areas of Northeast Brazil. Lat Am J Pharm. 2015;34(4):725-31.) investigated what services pharmacists delivered to patients, but without in-depth assessment of their implementation or procedures.

Although some studies used performance indicators to evaluate the pharmacist behaviour in delivering clinical pharmacy services (Aguiar et al., 2013Aguiar PM, Balisa-Rocha BJ, Lyra-Júnior DP. Avaliação de indicadores de estrutura e processo de um serviço de Atenção Farmacêutica na Farmácia Popular do Brasil: um estudo piloto. Rev Ciências Farm Básica Apl. 2013;34(3):401-10.; Galato et al., 2011Galato D, Alano GM, Trauthman SC, França TF. Pharmacy practice simulations: performance of senior pharmacy students at a University in southern Brazil. Pharm Pract. 2011;9(3):136-40.; Melo, Castro, 2017Melo DO, Castro LLC. Pharmacist’s contribution to the promotion of access and rational use of essential medicines in SUS. Cienc Saude Coletiva. 2017a;22(1):235-44.; Melo et al., 2017Melo DO, Molino CGC, Ribeiro E, Romano-Lieber NS. Capacitação e intervenções de técnicos de farmácia na dispensaçãvo de medicamentos em atenção primária à saúde. Cienc Saude Coletiva . 2017b;22(1):261-8.; Santos Júnior et al., 2020Santos Júnior GA, Silva ROS, Onozato T, Silvestre CC, Rocha KSS, Araújo EM, et al. Implementation of clinical pharmacy services using problematization with Maguerez Arc: a quasi-experimental before-after study. J Eval Clin Pract . 2020;27(2):391-403.), no study had systematically measured the fidelity of the interventions.

Studies reported the clinical pharmacy services with a heterogeneity in the terms used and showed a diverse comprehension about their definition. Several terms to designate minor ailment management services were used. ‘Indication of drugs’ (Ajalla, Castro, 2003Ajalla M, Castro L. Contribuição para melhoria da prática farmacêutica no atendimento de pacientes com queixas referentes a doenças sexualmente transmissíveis, em Campo Grande-MS. Rev Ciências Farm. 2003;24(2):121-30.), ‘self-medication’ or ‘responsible self-medication’ (Cadore et al., 1999Cadore L, Marc C, Berti C, Peukert C, Machado A. Pharmacy distribution of advice, symptomatic treatment and antimicrobial drugs to patients with cough. Braz J Infect Dis. 1999;3(5):180-3.; Rocha et al., 2014Rocha C, Bispo M, Alcantara T, Brito G, Vieira M, Lyra D. What do Brazilian community pharmacists know about self-medication for minor illnesses? A pilot study in the northeast of Brazil. J Appl Pharm Sci. 2014;4(5):12-20., 2015Reis TM, Rocha KSS, Barros IMC, Santos LMC, Paixão FP, Almeida FHO, et al. Pharmacists’ Skills in Conducting Clinical Services in Community Pharmacies in Urban Areas of Northeast Brazil. Lat Am J Pharm. 2015;34(4):725-31.), ‘OTC counseling’ (Halila et al., 2015Halila GC, Junior EH, Otuki MF, Correr CJ. The practice of OTC counseling by community pharmacists in Parana, Brazil. Pharm Pract . 2015;13(4):1-8.), ‘recommendation of non-prescription medicines’ (Mesquita et al., 2013Mesquita AR, Sá DAB de O, Santos APAL, Neto A de A, Lyra-Júnior DP. Assessment of pharmacist’s recommendation of non-prescription medicines in Brazil: a simulated patient study. Int J Clin Pharm . 2013;35(4):647-55.), and ‘recommendation of OTC drugs’ (Santos et al., 2013Santos A, Mesquita A, Oliveira K, Lyra D. Assessment of community pharmacists´ counselling skills on headache management by using the simulated patient approach: a pilot study. Pharm Pract . 2013;11(1):3-7.) were some terms of the diverse terminology found.

Medication therapy management services were described in some studies (Aguiar et al., 2012Aguiar PM, Balisa-Rocha BJ, Brito GC, Lyra DP. Pharmaceutical care program for elderly patients with uncontrolled hypertension. J Am Pharm Assoc. 2012;52(4):515-8.; Aguiar, Balisa-Rocha, Lyra Junior, 2013Aguiar PM, Balisa-Rocha BJ, Lyra-Júnior DP. Avaliação de indicadores de estrutura e processo de um serviço de Atenção Farmacêutica na Farmácia Popular do Brasil: um estudo piloto. Rev Ciências Farm Básica Apl. 2013;34(3):401-10.; Cazarim et al., 2016Cazarim M, Freitas O, Penaforte T, Achcar A, Pereira L. Impact assessment of pharmaceutical care in the management of hypertension and coronary risk factors after discharge. PLoS One. 2016;11(6):2006-8., 2017Cazarim M, Nunes AA, Pereira LRL. Cost-consequence analysis of Pharmaceutical Care program for systemic arterial hypertension in the public health system in Brazil. Braz J Pharm Sci. 2017;53(3):1-10., 2018Cazarim M, Pereira L. Cost-effectiveness analysis of pharmaceutical care for hypertensive patients from the perspective of the public health system in Brazil. PLoS One . 2018;13(3):1-16.; Lyra Junior et al., 2007Lyra Jr DP, Kheir N, Abriata JP, da Rocha CE, dos Santos CB, Pelá IR. Impact of Pharmaceutical Care interventions in the identification and resolution of drug-related problems and on quality of life in a group of elderly outpatients in Ribeirão Preto (SP), Brazil. Ther Clin Risk Manag. 2007;3(6):989-98.) as ‘pharmaceutical care’, which is a generic term. Others used the term ‘pharmaceutical care program’ (Andrade et al., 2009Andrade TU, Burini DM, Mello M de O, Bersácula N dos S, Saliba RAD, Bravim FT, et al. Evaluation of the satisfaction level of patients attended by a Pharmaceutical Care Program in a Private Communitarian Pharmacy in Vitória (ES, Brazil). Brazilian J Pharm Sci. 2009;45(2):349-55.; Mourão et al., 2013Mourão AOM, Ferreira WR, Martins MAP, Reis AMM, Carrillo MRG, Guimarães AG, et al. Pharmaceutical care program for type 2 diabetes patients in Brazil: A randomised controlled trial. Int J Clin Pharm . 2013;35(1):79-86.; Obreli-Neto et al., 2011aObreli-Neto PR, Guidoni CM, Baldoni A de O, Pilger D, Cruciol-Souza JM, Gaeti-Franco WP, et al. Effect of a 36-Month Pharmaceutical Care Program on Coronary Heart Disease Risk in Elderly Diabetic and Hypertensive Patients. J Pharm Pharm Sci. 2011a;14(2):249-63., 2001bObreli-Neto PR, Guidoni CM, Baldoni A de O, Pilger D, Cruciol-Souza J, Gaeti-Franco WP, et al. Effect of a 36-month pharmaceutical care program on pharmacotherapy adherence in elderly diabetic and hypertensive patients. Int J Clin Pharm . 2011b;33(4):642-9., 2015Obreli-Neto PR, Marusic S, Guidoni CM, Baldoni A de O, Renovato RD, Pilger D, et al. Economic evaluation of a Pharmaceutical Care Program for elderly diabetic and hypertensive patients in primary health care: a 36-month randomized controlled clinical trial. J Manag Care Spec Pharm. 2015;21(1):66-75.; Silva, Bazotte, 2011Silva G, Bazotte RB. Development and evaluation of a Pharmaceutical Care Program to reduce modifiable risk of chronic complications in Brazilian type 2 diabetic patients. Lat Am J Pharm . 2011;30(1):154-60.) to describe a set of services offered to patients along with medication therapy management, such as educative group activities or additional consultation about health issues. In addition, ‘pharmaceutical care model’ was used in a study to describe a service comprised by one consultation with the pharmacist for the evaluation of the drug prescription, identification of possible drug-related problems (i.e., adverse reactions and interactions), and guidance about treatment, with no follow-up (Gerenutti, Martinez, Bergamaschi, 2017Gerenutti M, Martinez AMV, Bergamaschi CC. The effectiveness of a pharmaceutical care model on adherence to antiretroviral therapy: A same-based cohort study in Brazil. Adv Pharm Bull. 2017;7(3):469-72.). Some of the most recent publications used the term ‘comprehensive medication management’ (Detoni et al., 2017Detoni KB, Oliveira I V, Nascimento MMG, Caux TR, Alves MR, Ramalho-De-Oliveira D. Impact of a medication therapy management service on the clinical status of patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. Int J Clin Pharm . 2017;39(1):95-103.; Santos et al., 2019; Santos Júnior et al., 2020Santos Júnior GA, Silva ROS, Onozato T, Silvestre CC, Rocha KSS, Araújo EM, et al. Implementation of clinical pharmacy services using problematization with Maguerez Arc: a quasi-experimental before-after study. J Eval Clin Pract . 2020;27(2):391-403.) or ‘comprehensive medication review’ (Scarabelin et al., 2019Scarabelin A, Santana Dosea A, Aguiar PM, Storpirtis S. Pharmacist-patient communication in prostate cancer as a strategy to humanize health care: a qualitative study. J Patient Exp. 2019;6(2):150-6.) to describe medication therapy management services.

Quality of the studies

Results of the ROB assessment for RCT and non-RCT studies are summarised in Figures 3 and 4. RCT (n=4) presented low ROB in generation of random sequences and selective report domains. Allocation concealment was unclear in 50% of the RCT studies. One study (Mourão et al., 2013Mourão AOM, Ferreira WR, Martins MAP, Reis AMM, Carrillo MRG, Guimarães AG, et al. Pharmaceutical care program for type 2 diabetes patients in Brazil: A randomised controlled trial. Int J Clin Pharm . 2013;35(1):79-86.) presented a high ROB in blinding of participants because the control group had access to all basal laboratory tests during the study, which could have interfered in the results of the intervention. Three studies (Firmino et al., 2015Firmino PYM, Vasconcelos TO, Ferreira CC, Moreira LM, Romero NR, Dias LA, et al. Cardiovascular risk rate in hypertensive patients attended in primary health care units: The influence of pharmaceutical care. Braz J Pharm Sci . 2015;51(3):617-28.; Mourão et al., 2013Mourão AOM, Ferreira WR, Martins MAP, Reis AMM, Carrillo MRG, Guimarães AG, et al. Pharmaceutical care program for type 2 diabetes patients in Brazil: A randomised controlled trial. Int J Clin Pharm . 2013;35(1):79-86.; Plaster et al., 2012Plaster CP, Melo DT, Boldt V, Cassaro KO dos S, Lessa FCR, Boëchat GAP, et al. Reduction of cardiovascular risk in patients with metabolic syndrome in a community health center after a pharmaceutical care program of pharmacotherapy follow-up. Braz J Pharm Sci . 2012;48(3):435-46.) did not report blinding of outcome assessment (unclear ROB). Incomplete data were due to incomplete reporting of participant dropouts in two studies (Firmino et al., 2015Firmino PYM, Vasconcelos TO, Ferreira CC, Moreira LM, Romero NR, Dias LA, et al. Cardiovascular risk rate in hypertensive patients attended in primary health care units: The influence of pharmaceutical care. Braz J Pharm Sci . 2015;51(3):617-28.; Plaster et al., 2012Plaster CP, Melo DT, Boldt V, Cassaro KO dos S, Lessa FCR, Boëchat GAP, et al. Reduction of cardiovascular risk in patients with metabolic syndrome in a community health center after a pharmaceutical care program of pharmacotherapy follow-up. Braz J Pharm Sci . 2012;48(3):435-46.).

FIGURE 3
Risk of bias of RCT studies as evaluated by ROB.

FIGURE 4
Risk of bias of non-RCT studies as evaluated by ROBINS-I.

High heterogeneity in the studies’ execution and reporting were observed in non-RCT designs (n=57). Interventions were not fully described in most non-RCT studies (n=37; 65%). Incomplete or unclear reporting of sources of clinical data (e.g., consultation interviews, prescription, electronic databases, or other), frequency and duration of the intervention, and details on the structured processes of the service was found (Rotta et al., 2015aRotta I, Salgado TM, Felix DC, Souza TT, Correr CJ, Fernandez-Llimos F. Ensuring consistent reporting of clinical pharmacy services to enhance reproducibility in practice: An improved version of DEPICT. J Eval Clin Pract. 2015a;21(4):584-90.). Consequently, most quasi-experimental, observational, and other studies presented great possibility of ROB in the intervention grouping domain from ROBINS-I when the process of the service interventions was not clearly reported (Sterne et al., 2016Sterne J, Hernán M, Reeves B, Savović J, Berkman N, Viswanathan M, et al. Risk Of Bias In Non-randomized Studies of Interventions (ROBINS-I): detailed guidance. BMJ. 2016;355:i4919.). Further, 29 studies (58.8%) showed unclear or high ROB due to not controlling confounders. Participant dropout was not sufficiently reported in 10 studies, resulting in an unclear ROB in the loss of data domain.

DISCUSSION

This scoping review provided for the first time an overview of studies about clinical pharmacy services in Brazilian community pharmacies. It found a great diversity of research approaches, outcomes evaluated, and methodological quality. The research on this topic has been concentrated in a couple of research universities, unevenly distributed across the country. Additionally, the service characteristics frequently were not comprehensively described, impairing the understanding of the association between the interventions performed and the results obtained.

Since a wide range of methodologies and study designs was employed in the assessment of clinical pharmacy services, it was not possible to closely compare the studies. This variability found among the Brazilian studies may hamper the production of evidence on the effectiveness of the services through secondary studies (i.e., systematic reviews), as the soundness of the conclusions of those studies relies on the methodological quality of the primary studies and their homogeneity (Bonetti et al., 2020Bonetti AF, Della Rocca AM, Lucchetta RC, Tonin FS, Fernandez-Llimos F, Pontarolo R. Mapping the characteristics of meta-analyses of pharmacy services: a systematic review. Int J Clin Pharm . 2020;42(5):1252-60.).

It is important to note that the majority of the studies (59%, n=36) had a non-interventional design, were conducted at one or few regional community pharmacies, and had a convenience, non-representative sample. These characteristics may hinder the development of robust conclusions (Clancy, 2002Clancy MJ. Overview of research designs. Emerg Med J. 2002;19(6):546-9.). RCTs are considered the gold standard for the evaluation of health interventions (Clancy, 2002Clancy MJ. Overview of research designs. Emerg Med J. 2002;19(6):546-9.), yet only four Brazilian RCTs on clinical pharmacy services were found in this review. This highlights the need of further well-designed interventional studies to fill some gaps in the regional literature. Nonetheless, observational studies, when well performed, can provide real-world evidence on the effects of interventions and are especially meaningful to assess daily clinical pharmacy services in specific settings and contexts (Elm et al., 2007Elm E von, Altman DG, Egger M, Pocock SJ, Gøtzsche PC, Vandenbroucke JP. Strengthening the reporting of observational studies in epidemiology (STROBE) statement: guidelines for reporting observational studies. BMJ. 2007;335(7624):806-8.). Additionally, non-interventional research designs are simpler, less expensive, and faster than interventional studies (Clancy, 2002Clancy MJ. Overview of research designs. Emerg Med J. 2002;19(6):546-9.; Nedel, Silveira, 2016Nedel WL, Silveira F. Different research designs and their characteristics in intensive care. Rev Bras Ter Intensiva. 2016;28(3):256-60.). These may lead researchers to choose these designs, considering that most of the research in Brazil is produced by public universities (ABC, 2019Academia Brasileira de Ciências (ABC). Universidades públicas respondem por mais de 95% da produção científica do Brasil. [Internet]. 2019. [cited 2020 Nov 16]. Available from: Available from: http://www.abc.org.br/2019/04/15/universidades-publicas-respondem-por-mais-de-95-da-producao-cientifica-do-brasil/ .
http://www.abc.org.br/2019/04/15/univers...
; Web of Science Group, 2019Web of Science Group. Research in Brazil: Funding excellence. Clarivate Anal. Co.; 2019.), where time and resources are often scarce (ABC, 2019Academia Brasileira de Ciências (ABC). Universidades públicas respondem por mais de 95% da produção científica do Brasil. [Internet]. 2019. [cited 2020 Nov 16]. Available from: Available from: http://www.abc.org.br/2019/04/15/universidades-publicas-respondem-por-mais-de-95-da-producao-cientifica-do-brasil/ .
http://www.abc.org.br/2019/04/15/univers...
).

The concentration of the Brazilian research production in public universities (ABC, 2019Academia Brasileira de Ciências (ABC). Universidades públicas respondem por mais de 95% da produção científica do Brasil. [Internet]. 2019. [cited 2020 Nov 16]. Available from: Available from: http://www.abc.org.br/2019/04/15/universidades-publicas-respondem-por-mais-de-95-da-producao-cientifica-do-brasil/ .
http://www.abc.org.br/2019/04/15/univers...
; Web of Science Group, 2019Web of Science Group. Research in Brazil: Funding excellence. Clarivate Anal. Co.; 2019.) influenced the geographic distribution of the studies included in this scoping review. States from southeastern and southern regions presented a higher concentration of studies on pharmacy services, which is coincident with the higher number of universities and pharmacy courses (INEP, 2018INEP - Instituto Nacional de Estudos e Pesquisas Educacionais Anísio Teixeira. Censo da Educação Superior: Sinopse Estatística da Educação Superior, 2018. [cited 2020 May 17]. Available from: Available from: http://portal.inep.gov.br/web/guest/sinopses-estatisticas-da-educacao-superior
http://portal.inep.gov.br/web/guest/sino...
). Besides, those states show better physical infrastructure of community pharmacies and human resources in comparison to other Brazilian regions (IBGE, 2010IBGE - Centro Brasileiro de Geografia e Estatística. Sinopse do Censo Demográfico 2010. [cited 2020 May 15]. Available from: Available from: https://censo2010.ibge.gov.br/sinopse/index.php?dados=10&uf=00
https://censo2010.ibge.gov.br/sinopse/in...
; Leite et al., 2017Leite SN, Bernardo NLM da C, Álvares J, Guerra Junior AA, Costa EA, Acurcio F de A, et al. Medicine dispensing service in primary health care of SUS. Rev Saude Publica . 2017;51(2):1s-10s.; Souza et al., 2017Souza GS, Costa EA, Barros RD, Pereira MT, Barreto JL, Guerra Junior AA, et al. Caracterização da institucionalização da assistência farmacêutica na atenção básica no Brasil. Rev Saude Publica . 2017;51( suppl 2):1s-12s.). However, an exception was noticed in Sergipe (northeastern region), which presented one of the higher number of studies per state but not a higher number of universities (INEP, 2018INEP - Instituto Nacional de Estudos e Pesquisas Educacionais Anísio Teixeira. Censo da Educação Superior: Sinopse Estatística da Educação Superior, 2018. [cited 2020 May 17]. Available from: Available from: http://portal.inep.gov.br/web/guest/sinopses-estatisticas-da-educacao-superior
http://portal.inep.gov.br/web/guest/sino...
). In Sergipe State, there is a research group in a federal university focused on the study of clinical pharmacy services, which may explain the considerable number of publications in this region.

Another factor that prevents further comparison was the use of distinct terminologies related to the clinical pharmacy services studied. Similarly to other countries (Imfeld-Isenegger et al., 2019Imfeld-Isenegger TL, Soares IB, Makovec UN, Horvat N, Kos M, van Mil F, et al. Community pharmacist-led medication review procedures across Europe: Characterization, implementation and remuneration. Res Soc Adm Pharm . 2019;16(8):1057-66.), the terminology of services can be confusing and frequently misunderstood. Some studies indicate that this variation of terminologies may be related to the conceptual and professional practice transitions that have happened in recent years in Brazil (Costa et al., 2017Costa EA, Araújo PS, Penaforte TR, Barreto JL, Guerra Junior AA, Acurcio F de A, et al. Conceptions on pharmaceutical services in Brazilian primary health care. Rev Saude Publica . 2017;51(suppl 2):5S.; Fegadolli, Cavaco, Fonseca, 2018Fegadolli C, Cavaco AM, Fonseca DC. Revisiting concepts, attitudes and expectations of Brazilian pharmacists to the practice of pharmaceutical care: a qualitative perspective. Indian J Pharm Educ Res. 2018;52(1):1-9.). With the curricular changes in the pharmacy courses (Brasil, 2017Brasil. Ministério da Educação. Conselho Nacional de Educação. Câmara de Educação Superior. Resolução no 6 de 19 de outubro de 2017. Institui as Diretrizes Curriculares Nacionais do Curso de Graduação em Farmácia e dá outras providências. Diário Oficial da União , Poder Executivo. Brasília/DF, 2017. Seção 1, p. 30. Available from: http://portal.mec.gov.br/docman/outubro-2017-pdf/74371-rces006-17-pdf/file.
http://portal.mec.gov.br/docman/outubro-...
) and the governmental incentives for training pharmacists on clinical pharmacy services (Brasil, 2012Brasil. Ministério da Saúde. Portaria no 1.214, de 13 de junho de 2012. Institui o Programa Nacional de Qualificação da Assistência Farmacêutica no âmbito do Sistema Único de Saúde (QUALIFAR-SUS). Diário Oficial da União , Poder Executivo Brasília/DF, 2012. Available from: http://bvsms.saude.gov.br/bvs/saudelegis/gm/2012/prt1214_13_06_2012.html
http://bvsms.saude.gov.br/bvs/saudelegis...
), a model centred on the patient (CFF, 2016aConselho Federal de Farmácia (CFF). Serviços farmacêuticos diretamente destinados ao paciente, à família e à comunidade: contextualização e arcabouço conceitual. 1a. Brasília: Conselho Federal de Farmácia ; 2016a.) has gradually replaced the traditional biomedical model of care focused on medicines (Fegadolli, Cavaco, Fonseca, 2018Fegadolli C, Cavaco AM, Fonseca DC. Revisiting concepts, attitudes and expectations of Brazilian pharmacists to the practice of pharmaceutical care: a qualitative perspective. Indian J Pharm Educ Res. 2018;52(1):1-9.). Further, most of the included studies in this scoping review (n=44; 72.1%) were published before 2016, when the conceptual framework of the Brazilian Pharmacy Federal Board (CFF, 2016aConselho Federal de Farmácia (CFF). Serviços farmacêuticos diretamente destinados ao paciente, à família e à comunidade: contextualização e arcabouço conceitual. 1a. Brasília: Conselho Federal de Farmácia ; 2016a.) had not yet been published. This material comprises the terms and concepts on each clinical service; thus, the great variability found among the included studies could also be due to the absence of a nation-wide reference at that time to support terminology standardisation for clinical pharmacy services.

Guidelines of different pharmacy practices are available in some countries to help pharmacists to perform clinical pharmacy services, such as the guidelines for dispensing medicines of the Pharmacy Board of Australia (2015)Pharmacy Board of Australia. Guidelines for dispensing of medicines; 2015. p. 1-16., the recommendations for medication therapy management services of the American Pharmacists Association of the United States (2008)American Pharmacists Association, National Association of Chain Drug Stores Foundation. Medication therapy management in community pharmacy practice: core elements of an MTM service model. American Pharmacists Association and National Association of Chain Drug Stores Foundation; 2008. 24p., the model standards for clinical practice for pharmacists from Canada (NAPRA, 2009National Association of Pharmacy Regulatory Authorities (NAPRA). Model standards for practice for Canadian pharmacists. Ottawa: The National Association of Pharmacy Regulatory Authorities; 2009. 18p.), and the regulatory framework for community pharmacy services and guidelines of European countries (Abrahamsen, Burghle, Rossing, 2020Abrahamsen B, Burghle AH, Rossing C. Pharmaceutical care services available in Danish community pharmacies. Int J Clin Pharm. 2020;42(2):315-20.; WHO, 2019World Health Organization. The legal and regulatory framework for community pharmacies in the WHO European Region. Copenhagen: WHO Regional Office for Europe; 2019.). In Brazil there are no national guidelines for the performance of all clinical pharmacy services in the conceptual framework (CFF, 2016aConselho Federal de Farmácia (CFF). Serviços farmacêuticos diretamente destinados ao paciente, à família e à comunidade: contextualização e arcabouço conceitual. 1a. Brasília: Conselho Federal de Farmácia ; 2016a.), but recently the Brazilian Pharmacy Federal Board published guidelines with recommendations for clinical practice on minor ailment management (CFF, 2016bConselho Federal de Farmácia (CFF). Guia de prática clínica: sinais e sintomas respiratórios. Brasília: Conselho Federal de Farmácia ; 2016b. 168p., 2017Conselho Federal de Farmácia (CFF). Guia de prática clínica: sinais e sintomas do aparelho genital feminino. Brasília: Conselho Federal de Farmácia ; 2017. 218p., 2018Conselho Federal de Farmácia (CFF). Guia de prática clínica: sinais e sintomas não específicos. Brasília: Conselho Federal de Farmácia ; 2018. 122p., 2020Conselho Federal de Farmácia (CFF). Guia de prática clínica: sinais e sintomas do trato gastrintestinal. Brasília: Conselho Federal de Farmácia ; 2020. 200p.). Development of guidelines for the other clinical pharmacy services is still needed to support pharmacists in their professional activities and standardisation of practice.

Many studies have not given a complete report of the processes and actions of pharmacists, which prevents them from being reproduced by another practitioner (Clay et al., 2019Clay PG, Burns AL, Isetts BJ, Hirsch JD, Kliethermes MA, Planas LG. PaCIR: A tool to enhance pharmacist patient care intervention reporting. J Am Pharm Assoc . 2019;59(5):615-23.; Craig et al., 2008Craig P, Dieppe P, Macintyre S, Mitchie S, Nazareth I, Petticrew M. Developing and evaluating complex interventions: The new Medical Research Council guidance. BMJ. 2008;337:a1655:979-83.). As clinical pharmacy services are considered complex interventions, all the processes must be well defined and standardised for their provision to patients, to evaluate outcomes, and to ensure reproducibility (Clay et al., 2019Clay PG, Burns AL, Isetts BJ, Hirsch JD, Kliethermes MA, Planas LG. PaCIR: A tool to enhance pharmacist patient care intervention reporting. J Am Pharm Assoc . 2019;59(5):615-23.; Craig et al., 2008Craig P, Dieppe P, Macintyre S, Mitchie S, Nazareth I, Petticrew M. Developing and evaluating complex interventions: The new Medical Research Council guidance. BMJ. 2008;337:a1655:979-83.; De Barra et al., 2019De Barra M, Scott C, Johnston M, De Bruin M, Scott N, Matheson C, et al. Do pharmacy intervention reports adequately describe their interventions? A template for intervention description and replication analysis of reports included in a systematic review. BMJ Open. 2019;9(12):1-8.; Rotta et al., 2015bRotta I, Salgado TM, Silva ML, Correr CJ, Fernandez-Llimos F. Effectiveness of clinical pharmacy services: an overview of systematic reviews (2000-2010). Int J Clin Pharm . 2015b;37(5):687-97.). Therefore, multiple components must be considered in the delivery and reporting of clinical pharmacy services, such as access of the patient to health services (e.g., educational level, ability to buy medication or to make an appointment), adherence, relationship with the physician, complexity of the pharmacotherapy, and the actions that pharmacists must plan for patients to achieve treatment goals (Clay et al., 2019Clay PG, Burns AL, Isetts BJ, Hirsch JD, Kliethermes MA, Planas LG. PaCIR: A tool to enhance pharmacist patient care intervention reporting. J Am Pharm Assoc . 2019;59(5):615-23.; Craig et al., 2008Craig P, Dieppe P, Macintyre S, Mitchie S, Nazareth I, Petticrew M. Developing and evaluating complex interventions: The new Medical Research Council guidance. BMJ. 2008;337:a1655:979-83.).

International researchers have developed checklists to help pharmacists and authors to plan, evaluate, and report interventions, and some of these instruments are available in the literature (Clay et al., 2019Clay PG, Burns AL, Isetts BJ, Hirsch JD, Kliethermes MA, Planas LG. PaCIR: A tool to enhance pharmacist patient care intervention reporting. J Am Pharm Assoc . 2019;59(5):615-23.; De Barra et al., 2019De Barra M, Scott C, Johnston M, De Bruin M, Scott N, Matheson C, et al. Do pharmacy intervention reports adequately describe their interventions? A template for intervention description and replication analysis of reports included in a systematic review. BMJ Open. 2019;9(12):1-8.; Rotta et al., 2015aRotta I, Salgado TM, Felix DC, Souza TT, Correr CJ, Fernandez-Llimos F. Ensuring consistent reporting of clinical pharmacy services to enhance reproducibility in practice: An improved version of DEPICT. J Eval Clin Pract. 2015a;21(4):584-90.). The DEPICT checklist (Rotta et al., 2015aRotta I, Salgado TM, Felix DC, Souza TT, Correr CJ, Fernandez-Llimos F. Ensuring consistent reporting of clinical pharmacy services to enhance reproducibility in practice: An improved version of DEPICT. J Eval Clin Pract. 2015a;21(4):584-90.), for example, gathers the essential elements into an adequate report of pharmacist interventions. According to this checklist, information about the qualification of the pharmacist (e.g., training), contact and communication with the recipient (e.g., face-to-face or telephone, one-on-one contact, or contact with a group), focus of intervention (e.g., on a specific medical condition or without restriction), frequency and duration of consultations, sources of data (e.g., interviews, patient diary, medical records), description of the content of the educational material provided or the protocol or guide used to make therapeutic decisions, detailed pharmacist actions (interventions, referral, counselling), and other processes are some elements to be considered in a clinical pharmacy services report (Craig et al., 2008Craig P, Dieppe P, Macintyre S, Mitchie S, Nazareth I, Petticrew M. Developing and evaluating complex interventions: The new Medical Research Council guidance. BMJ. 2008;337:a1655:979-83.; De Barra et al., 2019De Barra M, Scott C, Johnston M, De Bruin M, Scott N, Matheson C, et al. Do pharmacy intervention reports adequately describe their interventions? A template for intervention description and replication analysis of reports included in a systematic review. BMJ Open. 2019;9(12):1-8.; Rotta et al., 2015aRotta I, Salgado TM, Felix DC, Souza TT, Correr CJ, Fernandez-Llimos F. Ensuring consistent reporting of clinical pharmacy services to enhance reproducibility in practice: An improved version of DEPICT. J Eval Clin Pract. 2015a;21(4):584-90.).

Clinical pharmacy service implementation is a challenge in many countries, as reported by Imfeld-Isenegger et al. (2019Imfeld-Isenegger TL, Soares IB, Makovec UN, Horvat N, Kos M, van Mil F, et al. Community pharmacist-led medication review procedures across Europe: Characterization, implementation and remuneration. Res Soc Adm Pharm . 2019;16(8):1057-66.), who evaluated the characteristics and implementation of medication review services in Europe. This scoping review demonstrated that Brazil suffers a similar situation. An indication of this difficulty is the low number of studies. Only ten studies on medication therapy management (Andrade et al., 2009Andrade TU, Burini DM, Mello M de O, Bersácula N dos S, Saliba RAD, Bravim FT, et al. Evaluation of the satisfaction level of patients attended by a Pharmaceutical Care Program in a Private Communitarian Pharmacy in Vitória (ES, Brazil). Brazilian J Pharm Sci. 2009;45(2):349-55.; Garabeli et al., 2016Garabeli AA, Daher JB, Wiens A, Lenzi L, Pontarolo R. Quality of life perception of type 1 diabetic patients treated with insulin analogs and receiving medication review with follow-up in a public health care service from ponta Grossa-PR, Brazil. Braz J Pharm Sci . 2016;52(4):669-78.; Gomes et al., 2020Gomes LO, Teixeira MR, Rosa JA da, Foppa AA, Rover MRM, Farias MR. The benefits of a public pharmacist service in chronic hepattis C treatment: the real-life results of sofosbuvir-based therapy. Res Soc Adm Pharm. 2020;16(1):48-53.; Melo, Castro, 2017Melo DO, Castro LLC. Pharmacist’s contribution to the promotion of access and rational use of essential medicines in SUS. Cienc Saude Coletiva. 2017a;22(1):235-44.; Mendonça et al., 2016Mendonça SM, Melo AC, Pereira GC, dos Santos D, Grossi EB, Sousa M, et al. Clinical outcomes of medication therapy management services in primary health care. Braz J Pharm Sci . 2016;52(3):365-73.; Obreli-Neto et al., 2011aObreli-Neto PR, Guidoni CM, Baldoni A de O, Pilger D, Cruciol-Souza JM, Gaeti-Franco WP, et al. Effect of a 36-Month Pharmaceutical Care Program on Coronary Heart Disease Risk in Elderly Diabetic and Hypertensive Patients. J Pharm Pharm Sci. 2011a;14(2):249-63., 2011bObreli-Neto PR, Guidoni CM, Baldoni A de O, Pilger D, Cruciol-Souza J, Gaeti-Franco WP, et al. Effect of a 36-month pharmaceutical care program on pharmacotherapy adherence in elderly diabetic and hypertensive patients. Int J Clin Pharm . 2011b;33(4):642-9., 2015Obreli-Neto PR, Marusic S, Guidoni CM, Baldoni A de O, Renovato RD, Pilger D, et al. Economic evaluation of a Pharmaceutical Care Program for elderly diabetic and hypertensive patients in primary health care: a 36-month randomized controlled clinical trial. J Manag Care Spec Pharm. 2015;21(1):66-75.; Santos Júnior et al., 2020Santos Júnior GA, Silva ROS, Onozato T, Silvestre CC, Rocha KSS, Araújo EM, et al. Implementation of clinical pharmacy services using problematization with Maguerez Arc: a quasi-experimental before-after study. J Eval Clin Pract . 2020;27(2):391-403.; Scarabelin et al., 2019Scarabelin A, Santana Dosea A, Aguiar PM, Storpirtis S. Pharmacist-patient communication in prostate cancer as a strategy to humanize health care: a qualitative study. J Patient Exp. 2019;6(2):150-6.) included in this review were related to service implementation. Other publications refer to services offered for scientific purposes, including pilot studies developed during the research period only and not as continued services offered by a community pharmacy.

The implementation of innovative services is a complex and long-term process that requires a comprehensive approach in several domains (Varas-Dorval et al., 2020Varas-Doval R, Gastelurrutia MA, Benrimoj SI, Zarzuelo MJ, Garcia-Cardenas V, Perez-Escamilla B, et al. Evaluating an implementation programme for medication review with follow-up in community pharmacy using a hybrid effectiveness study design: Translating evidence into practice. BMJ Open. 2020; 10(9):36669.). A successful implementation depends on a sound theoretical background that might be supported by use of models and frameworks (Moullin et al., 2015Moullin JC, Sabater-Hernández D, Fernandez-Llimos F, Benrimoj SI. A systematic review of implementation frameworks of innovations in healthcare and resulting generic implementation framework. Heal Res Policy Syst. 2015;13:16.; Varas-Dorval et al., 2020Varas-Doval R, Gastelurrutia MA, Benrimoj SI, Zarzuelo MJ, Garcia-Cardenas V, Perez-Escamilla B, et al. Evaluating an implementation programme for medication review with follow-up in community pharmacy using a hybrid effectiveness study design: Translating evidence into practice. BMJ Open. 2020; 10(9):36669.). In recent years, some theoretical frameworks for the implementation of innovative services into practice have been developed for guiding healthcare professionals (Moullin et al., 2015Moullin JC, Sabater-Hernández D, Fernandez-Llimos F, Benrimoj SI. A systematic review of implementation frameworks of innovations in healthcare and resulting generic implementation framework. Heal Res Policy Syst. 2015;13:16.). The Framework for the Implementation of Services in Pharmacy (FISpH), for instance, is a model created to be used in clinical pharmacy services. It includes some core concepts, such as the process to implement an innovative service, the contextual domains that could influence patients’ behaviour, the barriers and facilitators, and the strategies and evaluation of the implementation programme (Moullin et al., 2016aMoullin JC, Sabater-Hernández D, Benrimoj SI. Model for the evaluation of implementation programs and professional pharmacy services. Res Soc Adm Pharm . 2016a;12(3):515-22.).

A core element of the implementation frameworks that appears to be frequently neglected by researchers is evaluation (Moullin et al., 2016bMoullin JC, Sabater-Hernández D, Benrimoj SI. Qualitative study on the implementation of professional pharmacy services in Australian community pharmacies using framework analysis. BMC Health Serv Res. 2016b;16(1):1-13.; Patwardhan, Amin, Chewning, 2014Patwardhan PD, Amin ME, Chewning BA. Intervention research to enhance community pharmacists’ cognitive services: A systematic review. Res Soc Adm Pharm . 2014;10(3):475-93.). Service evaluation often seems to be focused only on patients’ outcomes and cost-effectiveness, without an in-depth assessment or report of implementation indicators, such as fidelity measures (Moullin et al., 2016aMoullin JC, Sabater-Hernández D, Benrimoj SI. Model for the evaluation of implementation programs and professional pharmacy services. Res Soc Adm Pharm . 2016a;12(3):515-22.). The fidelity of an intervention is the extension that an intervention is implemented as originally intended and planned by the developers (Carroll et al., 2007Carroll C, Patterson M, Wood S, Booth A, Rick J, Balain S. A conceptual framework for implementation fidelity. Implement Sci. 2007;2:40.; Craig et al., 2008Craig P, Dieppe P, Macintyre S, Mitchie S, Nazareth I, Petticrew M. Developing and evaluating complex interventions: The new Medical Research Council guidance. BMJ. 2008;337:a1655:979-83.). The evaluation of the pharmacist behaviour through systematic fidelity measures in the delivering of the service allows to determine clearer relationships of the outcomes achieved and identify the issues that could hinder or facilitate the achievement of positive outcomes (Carroll et al., 2007Carroll C, Patterson M, Wood S, Booth A, Rick J, Balain S. A conceptual framework for implementation fidelity. Implement Sci. 2007;2:40.; Patwardhan, Amin, Chewning, 2014Patwardhan PD, Amin ME, Chewning BA. Intervention research to enhance community pharmacists’ cognitive services: A systematic review. Res Soc Adm Pharm . 2014;10(3):475-93.; van der Laan et al., 2019van der Laan DM, Langendoen-Gort M, Nijpels G, Boons CCLM, Elders PJM, Hugtenburg JG. Implementation fidelity of an intervention programme to enhance adherence to antihypertensive medication in Dutch community pharmacies. Int J Clin Pharm . 2019;41(4):1031-46.). Considering the complexity of clinical pharmacy services, the role of each intervention’s components and its effect on the outcomes need to be clarified (van der Laan et al., 2019van der Laan DM, Langendoen-Gort M, Nijpels G, Boons CCLM, Elders PJM, Hugtenburg JG. Implementation fidelity of an intervention programme to enhance adherence to antihypertensive medication in Dutch community pharmacies. Int J Clin Pharm . 2019;41(4):1031-46.).

The literature strongly recommends measuring the fidelity of interventions delivered in studies of clinical pharmacy services to support authors and practitioners in establishing the relationships between the proposed interventions and the expected outcomes (Carroll et al., 2007Carroll C, Patterson M, Wood S, Booth A, Rick J, Balain S. A conceptual framework for implementation fidelity. Implement Sci. 2007;2:40.; De Barra et al., 2019De Barra M, Scott C, Johnston M, De Bruin M, Scott N, Matheson C, et al. Do pharmacy intervention reports adequately describe their interventions? A template for intervention description and replication analysis of reports included in a systematic review. BMJ Open. 2019;9(12):1-8.; Moullin et al., 2016aMoullin JC, Sabater-Hernández D, Benrimoj SI. Model for the evaluation of implementation programs and professional pharmacy services. Res Soc Adm Pharm . 2016a;12(3):515-22.). Studies have demonstrated that high-fidelity interventions present better clinical, humanistic, and economic outcomes in comparison to those with low fidelity (Durlak, DuPre, 2008Durlak JA, DuPre EP. Implementation matters: A review of research on the influence of implementation on program outcomes and the factors affecting implementation. Am J Community Psychol. 2008;41(3-4):327-50.; von Thiele Schwarz Hasson, Lindfors, 2015von Thiele Schwarz U, Hasson H, Lindfors P. Applying a fidelity framework to understand adaptations in an occupational health intervention. Work. 2015;51(2):195-203.). Besides, measuring fidelity can help identify the elements associated with an ineffective clinical pharmacy service, such as poor implementation processes (Moullin et al., 2016aMoullin JC, Sabater-Hernández D, Benrimoj SI. Model for the evaluation of implementation programs and professional pharmacy services. Res Soc Adm Pharm . 2016a;12(3):515-22.; Patwardhan, Amin, Chewning, 2014Patwardhan PD, Amin ME, Chewning BA. Intervention research to enhance community pharmacists’ cognitive services: A systematic review. Res Soc Adm Pharm . 2014;10(3):475-93.; van der Laan et al., 2019van der Laan DM, Langendoen-Gort M, Nijpels G, Boons CCLM, Elders PJM, Hugtenburg JG. Implementation fidelity of an intervention programme to enhance adherence to antihypertensive medication in Dutch community pharmacies. Int J Clin Pharm . 2019;41(4):1031-46.). Finally, consistently reporting the fidelity in studies can better clarify the real effect of the clinical pharmacy services on patients’ outcomes.

Limitations

This scoping review may have some limitations. The search strategy was developed to be as inclusive as possible, but it may not have included all studies on clinical pharmacy services due to the heterogeneity of terms used by authors to describe similar services. Comparisons between the study’s results were not possible due to the great variability of research designs, outcomes, and other elements assessed. Although a scoping review does not formally require a methodological quality assessment of the included studies, we performed this step to provide a qualitative overview of the available evidence in Brazil. The domains of tools were adapted and interpreted according to the nature of the interventions to avoid bias.

Strengths

To the best of our knowledge, this is the first scoping review that evaluated studies on clinical pharmacy services delivered in community pharmacies in Brazil. To date, no comprehensive literature review has assessed these Brazilian publications and their methodological quality. Considering the recent expansion of the services in Brazil, this mapping shows the research scenario in the country and may be useful in the development of future studies on the topic.

CONCLUSION

This scoping review on clinical pharmacy services delivered in Brazilian community pharmacies has shown the studies were diverse and heterogeneous in several aspects. First, services were evaluated through a great number of methodological designs, and the studies presented the results of the analysis from different outcomes or other elements of the service’s process. Second, they were unevenly distributed across the Brazilian territory. Third, studies showed a non-standardisation of the terminology used to describe the services, along with an unclear or incomplete report of the interventions performed in several cases. Lastly, the studies’ quality assessment has shown an unclear or high ROB in several domains of the instruments used, which may hinder their reproducibility. Through these findings, this scoping review suggests that well-designed Brazilian studies, with more robust methodologies and well-structured and reported interventions, are required to reach more reliable results. Additionally, fidelity measures are needed for evaluation of the implementation of clinical pharmacy services. We recommend the use of frameworks, guidelines, and checklists in the development of the interventions and to conduct future studies on clinical pharmacy services in Brazilian community pharmacies.

ACKNOWLEDGEMENT

This research was funded in part by a doctoral grant provided by the Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior - Brasil (CAPES) - Funding Code 001.

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Publication Dates

  • Publication in this collection
    09 Jan 2023
  • Date of issue
    2022

History

  • Received
    08 Sept 2020
  • Accepted
    04 July 2021
Universidade de São Paulo, Faculdade de Ciências Farmacêuticas Av. Prof. Lineu Prestes, n. 580, 05508-000 S. Paulo/SP Brasil, Tel.: (55 11) 3091-3824 - São Paulo - SP - Brazil
E-mail: bjps@usp.br