Skip to main content

Table 2 Medication management, diabetes self-management, and participants’ opinions about their medications and pharmacists

From: Interest in and use of person-centred pharmacy services - a Swiss study of people with diabetes

Variable

Total Ne

%a (N) or mean (SD; min-max)

Medication management

 Type of diabetes

790

 

  Type 1

 

11.4% (90)

  Type 2

 

72.0% (569)

  Other or unknown

 

16.6% (131)

 Frequency of pharmacy visits

747

 

   ≥ 1 time per week

 

6.7% (50)

  2–3 times per month

 

30.1% (225)

  1 time per month

 

35.3% (264)

   < 1 time per month

 

27.8% (208)

 Number of medications per day

773

 

  1–3 medications

 

29.4% (227)

  4–6 medications

 

41.9% (324)

  7–9 medications

 

19.7% (152)

   ≥ 10 medications

 

9.1% (70)

 Antidiabetic medication

788

 

  Excluding insulin or other injectables

 

43.0% (339)

  Including insulin or other injectables

 

57.0% (445)

Diabetes self-management

 Participation in one or more diabetes education courses

771

 

  Yes

 

35.4% (273)

  No

 

64.6% (498)

 Stanford Diabetes Self-efficacy overall scoreb

755

7.5 (1.8; 2.1–10.0)

Participants’ opinions about their medications

  “Medications that are prescribed to me are important”

768

 

  Disagree

 

4.2% (32)

  Agree

 

95.8% (736)

  “I fear that prescribed medication are more harmful than beneficial”

757

 

  Disagree

 

86.4% (654)

  Agree

 

13.6% (103)

  “Non-reimbursed medications are burdensome for me”

760

 

  Disagree

 

27.9% (212)

  Agree

 

72.1% (548)

 Positive opinion about medications on all 3 itemsc

770

 

  Yes

 

23.6% (182)

  No

 

76.4% (588)

Participants’ opinions about pharmacists

  “Pharmacists are experts in medications, side effects and medication interactions”

741

 

  Disagree

 

6.3% (47)

  Agree

 

93.7% (694)

  “Pharmacists are health professionals, just like physicians or nurses”

734

 

  Disagree

 

15.7% (115)

  Agree

 

84.3% (619)

  “Pharmacists are just shopkeepers who sell products in pharmacy”

722

 

  Disagree

 

85.9% (620)

  Agree

 

14.1% (102)

 Positive opinion about pharmacists on all 3 itemsd

764

 

  Yes

 

65.5% (500)

  No

 

34.6% (264)

  1. a Due to rounding, the sum of the percentages is not always equal to 100%
  2. b The Stanford Diabetes Self-efficacy overall score ranges from 0 to 10, with a higher score indicating a higher level of self-efficacy
  3. c Composite variable for opinion about medication: respondents answering agree, disagree, and disagree to the three items, in that order, were considered to have a positive opinion
  4. d Composite variable for opinion about pharmacists: respondents answering agree, agree, and disagree to the three items, in that order, were considered to have a positive opinion
  5. e The total number of respondents for each item varies since data were collected through a self-administered paper questionnaire and participants were free to not answer certain questions