The RxGen project: Strengthening pharmacies? capacity to serve youth

For nearly 30 years, PATH has worked to improve global health in the areas of children?s health, infectious diseases, maternal and reproductive health, and vaccines and immunization. In particular, we would like to highlight the RxGen project, a pharmacy-based program that worked to increase youth?s access to reproductive health services and products. The health context Worldwide, rates of sexually transmitted infections (STIs) are highest among young people aged 15 to 24 years, and complications from pregnancy, childbirth, and unsafe abortions have become the major causes of death for girls aged 15 to 19. Youth need better access to reproductive health information, services, and supplies. Pharmacies as untapped resources Licensed and regulated commercial pharmacies are an underused resource for expanding the reach of select public health interventions. Especially in developing countries, pharmacies are often a primary source of services; thus, pharmacy staff are in a good position to help their clients with reproductive health needs, such as emergency contraception, STI risk assessment and referral, and ongoing use of contraception. Pharmacies are particularly appealing to youth, who frequently avoid the formal health system because of the stigma attached to those who are sexually active and unmarried. Pharmacies offer convenience, affordability, relative anonymity, and greater availability of reproductive health supplies. Building capacity With the RxGen project, PATH built the capacity of pharmacists and their staff to provide quality reproductive health information and services, especially to youth. We implemented activities in four countries: Cambodia, Kenya, Nicaragua, and Vietnam. Evaluation data indicate that the project increased pharmacy staff?s ability to provide high-quality, youth-friendly services. Baseline data showed that 0 to 30 percent of staff provided correct emergency contraception products; after training, about 80 percent of staff gave project-trained monitors, or mystery shoppers, correct products. Similarly, mystery shopper reports showed that more than half of staff in each country spontaneously offered information about STIs when shoppers sought services after unprotected sex. Finally, nearly 90 percent of mystery shoppers reported a positive experience in the pharmacies.

About You

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Location

Project Street Address

Project City

Project Province/State

Project Postal/Zip Code

Project Country

n/a

Your idea

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Focus of activity

Reproductive Health

Start Year

2000

Positioning in the mosaic of solutions

Main barrier addressed

Limited reach of healthcare infrastructure

Main principle addressed

Adopt market-based models as a scaling-up strategy

Name Your Project

The RxGen project: Strengthening pharmacies? capacity to serve youth

Describe Your Idea

For nearly 30 years, PATH has worked to improve global health in the areas of children?s health, infectious diseases, maternal and reproductive health, and vaccines and immunization. In particular, we would like to highlight the RxGen project, a pharmacy-based program that worked to increase youth?s access to reproductive health services and products. The health context Worldwide, rates of sexually transmitted infections (STIs) are highest among young people aged 15 to 24 years, and complications from pregnancy, childbirth, and unsafe abortions have become the major causes of death for girls aged 15 to 19. Youth need better access to reproductive health information, services, and supplies. Pharmacies as untapped resources Licensed and regulated commercial pharmacies are an underused resource for expanding the reach of select public health interventions. Especially in developing countries, pharmacies are often a primary source of services; thus, pharmacy staff are in a good position to help their clients with reproductive health needs, such as emergency contraception, STI risk assessment and referral, and ongoing use of contraception. Pharmacies are particularly appealing to youth, who frequently avoid the formal health system because of the stigma attached to those who are sexually active and unmarried. Pharmacies offer convenience, affordability, relative anonymity, and greater availability of reproductive health supplies. Building capacity With the RxGen project, PATH built the capacity of pharmacists and their staff to provide quality reproductive health information and services, especially to youth. We implemented activities in four countries: Cambodia, Kenya, Nicaragua, and Vietnam. Evaluation data indicate that the project increased pharmacy staff?s ability to provide high-quality, youth-friendly services. Baseline data showed that 0 to 30 percent of staff provided correct emergency contraception products; after training, about 80 percent of staff gave project-trained monitors, or mystery shoppers, correct products. Similarly, mystery shopper reports showed that more than half of staff in each country spontaneously offered information about STIs when shoppers sought services after unprotected sex. Finally, nearly 90 percent of mystery shoppers reported a positive experience in the pharmacies.

Innovation

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Description of health product/service offering:

For nearly 30 years, PATH has worked to improve global health in the areas of children?s health, infectious diseases, maternal and reproductive health, and vaccines and immunization. In particular, we would like to highlight the RxGen project, a pharmacy-based program that worked to increase youth?s access to reproductive health services and products. The health context Worldwide, rates of sexually transmitted infections (STIs) are highest among young people aged 15 to 24 years, and complications from pregnancy, childbirth, and unsafe abortions have become the major causes of death for girls aged 15 to 19. Youth need better access to reproductive health information, services, and supplies. Pharmacies as untapped resources Licensed and regulated commercial pharmacies are an underused resource for expanding the reach of select public health interventions. Especially in developing countries, pharmacies are often a primary source of services; thus, pharmacy staff are in a good position to help their clients with reproductive health needs, such as emergency contraception, STI risk assessment and referral, and ongoing use of contraception. Pharmacies are particularly appealing to youth, who frequently avoid the formal health system because of the stigma attached to those who are sexually active and unmarried. Pharmacies offer convenience, affordability, relative anonymity, and greater availability of reproductive health supplies. Building capacity With the RxGen project, PATH built the capacity of pharmacists and their staff to provide quality reproductive health information and services, especially to youth. We implemented activities in four countries: Cambodia, Kenya, Nicaragua, and Vietnam. Evaluation data indicate that the project increased pharmacy staff?s ability to provide high-quality, youth-friendly services. Baseline data showed that 0 to 30 percent of staff provided correct emergency contraception products; after training, about 80 percent of staff gave project-trained monitors, or mystery shoppers, correct products. Similarly, mystery shopper reports showed that more than half of staff in each country spontaneously offered information about STIs when shoppers sought services after unprotected sex. Finally, nearly 90 percent of mystery shoppers reported a positive experience in the pharmacies.

Description of innovation:

The RxGen model differs from existing programs in the field in the following ways: ? Recognizes the pharmacy as a critical health care delivery site. ? Works within and strengthens existing systems?pharmacies that people already use and pharmacy associations that represent the professional standards of pharmacists and pharmacy owners. ? Focuses on building the capacity of pharmacy staff to deliver quality information and services, rather than to promote products. ? Relies on close collaboration with and leadership by public and private stakeholders at the national, regional, and local levels in a country.

Operational model:

Although RxGen focused on pharmacies, the ultimate goal was to get youth better access to the information and services that will help them avoid unintended pregnancies and sexually transmitted infections. In many countries, youth are underserved by the formal health system?especially when it comes to their reproductive health needs. To remedy this, PATH and our partners: ? Developed a comprehensive training curriculum for pharmacists and their staff. The training was designed to build (1) participants? capacity to provide reproductive health services, information, and when needed, referrals for clinical services and (2) counseling skills and ability to provide services in a nonjudgmental manner. ? Trained the trainers of pharmacists and their staff. Trainers varied among the four countries, but included staff of the local pharmacist association and ministry of health, physicians, and academics. ? Established systems for monitoring pharmacies and providing refresher training. ? Developed job aids for pharmacy staff to reinforce what they learned at the training sessions. ? Identified or developed collateral client materials on key reproductive health issues for pharmacies to provide to clients. ? Built referral networks that linked pharmacy clients with local health care providers and services for diagnosis and treatment of sexually transmitted infections, when appropriate. ? Collaborated with existing youth-serving organizations to raise young people?s awareness about the services pharmacies offer. With our local partners in each country, we developed a symbol indicating ?youth-friendly pharmacy? to identify participating businesses. ? Used ?mystery shoppers? to monitor the reproductive health services provided at pharmacies and to evaluate the project?s success. ? Tailored the approach to four countries?each representing a different cultural setting and a unique pharmaceutical sector. Our public- and private-sector partners included government ministries, universities, pharmacy associations, pharmacists, youth organizations, and youth.

Human resources:

The RxGen project was completed at the end of 2005. Project management was a cross-site collaboration between PATH offices in each of the four countries and PATH staff at our headquarters in Seattle. Close coordination among all sites ensured comparability across the four countries and enabled country project teams to troubleshoot, share ideas, and learn from each others? experiences. PATH staff had expertise in public health and reproductive health, training, and project development and implementation. The project also relied heavily on the expertise of local partners, which included ministries of health, pharmaceutical associations, university schools of pharmacy, youth-serving groups, and youth themselves.

Key operational partnerships:

The project relied on close collaboration with and leadership by stakeholders at the national, regional, and local levels in a country. These stakeholders included pharmacies and pharmacy associations from the private sector, ministries of health and university schools of pharmacy from the public sector, and youth-serving organizations from nongovernmental organizations. As members of the project?s technical advisory group, stakeholders effectively guided the project strategies and activities.

Impact

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Financial Sustainability:

Current and Future Impact:

Scaling up strategy:

Stage of the initiative:

Mature stage.

Expansion plan:

Cambodia, Kenya, Nicaragua, and Vietnam continue to implement the RxGen model. The RxGen curriculum has been incorporated into the curriculum of pharmacy schools in Cambodia (the Faculty of Pharmacy at the University of Health Science), Nicaragua (National Autonomous University of Nicaragua in Le?n), and Vietnam (the Thanh Hoa Medical College). It is also in use in continuing education programs for pharmacists in Cambodia and Kenya. To help other groups replicate and adapt the RxGen model in other areas, PATH has developed a roadmap: the Youth-Friendly Pharmacy Program Implementation Kit (available on PATH?s website at http://www.path.org/publications/pub.php?id=860). Available in both English and Spanish, the kit contains a description of start-up strategies and activities, five teaching modules, handouts and job aids, prototype materials, and evaluation instruments. We also are exploring the expansion of primary-care services offered at community pharmacies. For example, could pharmacy staff use simple, rapid diagnostics to test clients for tuberculosis?

Origin of the initiative:

PATH had worked with pharmacists in the US as well as in the Philippines, Thailand, and Cambodia to expand access to STI diagnosis and treatment and to emergency contraception. We knew that pharmacies had the potential to meet the needs of youth; the RxGen project began as a pilot project to test this premise. Our efforts coincided with an emerging trend in the developing world of increased governmental interest in pharmacy regulation and capacity building. As part of this trend, pharmaceutical associations, often in collaboration with the government, were taking on more responsibility for pharmacy oversight and quality assurance. To build on these changes, the RxGen project worked with licensed pharmacies and professional pharmacy associations in each of the four countries to emphasize the needs of youth, develop the capacity of pharmacies to provide critical services to this group, and link pharmacies and their clients to the formal healthcare system.

This Entry is about (Issues)

Sustainability

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Policy change:

Two policy changes would greatly enhance RxGen efforts. First, continuing education for pharmacy staff and pharmacists should be routine in each country. Second, pharmacy regulations could allow for a second tier of accreditation or an expansion of pharmacies? scope of practice that would allow them to meet other primary-care needs. For example, licensed pharmacists and accredited pharmacy staff could offer diagnosis (syndromic or rapid test, and sample collection for laboratory analysis); disease surveillance; referral; and treatment (adherence to ART, DOTS).

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