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AuthorShafei, Laila
AuthorMekki, Lina
AuthorMaklad, Esraa
AuthorAlhathal, Turfa
AuthorGhanem, Rawan
AuthorAlmalouf, Rama
AuthorStewart, Derek
AuthorNazar, Zachariah
Available date2023-07-20T07:11:00Z
Publication Date2023-05-29
Publication NameInternational Journal of Clinical Pharmacy
Identifierhttp://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11096-023-01591-z
CitationShafei, L., Mekki, L., Maklad, E., Alhathal, T., Ghanem, R., Almalouf, R., ... & Nazar, Z. (2023). Factors that influence patient and public adverse drug reaction reporting: a systematic review using the theoretical domains framework. International Journal of Clinical Pharmacy, 1-13.
ISSN2210-7703
URIhttps://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?partnerID=HzOxMe3b&scp=85160415409&origin=inward
URIhttp://hdl.handle.net/10576/45988
AbstractBackground: Only 5–10% of all adverse drug reactions (ADRs) are reported. Mechanisms to support patient and public reporting offer numerous advantages to health care systems including increasing reporting rate. Theory-informed insights into the factors implicated in patient and public underreporting are likely to offer valuable opportunity for the development of effective reporting-interventions and optimization of existing systems. Aim: To collate, summarize and synthesize the reported behavioral determinants using the theoretical domains framework (TDF), that influence patient and public reporting of ADRs. Method: Cochrane, CINAHL, Web of science, EMBASE and PubMed were systematically searched on October 25th, 2021. Studies assessing the factors influencing public or patients reporting of ADRs were included. Full-text screening, data extraction and quality appraisal were performed independently by two authors. Extracted factors were mapped to TDF. Results: 26 studies were included conducted in 14 countries across five continents. Knowledge, social/professional role and identity, beliefs about consequences, and environmental context and resources, appeared to be the most significant TDF domains that influenced patient and public behaviors regarding ADR reporting. Conclusion: Studies included in this review were deemed of low risk of bias and allowed for identification of key behavioural determinants, which may be mapped to evidence-based behavioral change strategies that facilitate intervention development to enhance rates of ADR reporting. Aligning strategies should focus on education, training and further involvement from regulatory bodies and government support to establish mechanisms, which facilitate feedback and follow-ups on submitted reports.
SponsorOpen Access funding provided by the Qatar National Library. This publication was made possible by the UREP award [UREP25-068-3-020] from the Qatar National Research Fund (a member of The Qatar Foundation).
Languageen
SubjectAdverse drug reactions
Behaviour change
Direct patient reporting
Drug safety
Pharmacovigilance
Self-reporting
Theoretical domains framework
Under-reporting
TitleFactors that influence patient and public adverse drug reaction reporting: a systematic review using the theoretical domains framework
TypeArticle
Pagination1-13
ESSN2210-7711


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