Community pharmacy and primary health care - Types of integration and their applicability: A narrative review
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Urionagüena, Amaia; Piquer Martínez, Celia; Gastelurrutia Garralda, Miguel Ángel; Benrimoj, Shalom Isaac; Martínez Martínez, FernandoEditorial
Elsevier
Materia
Integration Types of integration Community pharmacy Primary health care Integrated care
Date
2022-10-29Referencia bibliográfica
Amaia Urionagüena... [et al.]. Community pharmacy and primary health care - Types of integration and their applicability: A narrative review, Research in Social and Administrative Pharmacy, Volume 19, Issue 3, 2023, Pages 414-431, ISSN 1551-7411, [https://doi.org/10.1016/j.sapharm.2022.10.007]
Sponsorship
University of the Basque Country US20/08; Cinfa laboratories for the PhD scholarshipAbstract
Background: There is an urgent need for health care systems to be more efficient and efficacious. An approach to
integrate public and private provider organizations such as community pharmacies and public primary health
care (PHC) merits consideration. The objective of this review was to identify the types of integration in health
care settings and discuss their applicability to the potential integration of community pharmacy and PHC.
Methods: A narrative review using Medline, Scopus and SciELO databases was performed in which terms related
to health were combined with terms related to integration.
Levels and Types of integration: 14 types of integration were identified (two in breadth, seven as enablers and
five in system levels). A model was created which classifies and assigns the types of integration to the different
levels of the health system and to the breadth, intensity, and enablers of the integration process. Due to the
nature of community pharmacy and PHC system, a horizontal integration at the micro level, supported by meso
and macro levels policy, is suggested. The different elements of intensity and enablers can significantly influence
the process.
Conclusion: The application of principles, concepts and types of integration suggest that it might be feasible and
practical to integrate community pharmacies and PHC. However, the conflictive historical context would need to
be overcome with appropriate policy and incentives.