Collaborative ear health intervention pilot LISTEN UP between community pharmacists and GPs delivers better patient outcomes.
Ear disease in rural and remote communities is occurring at alarmingly high rates, with limited access to health services and providers contributing to the problem.
Community pharmacists are playing a vital role as primary healthcare providers by supporting rural patients with ear disease, in a new intervention pilot called LISTEN UP: Locally Integrated Screening and Testing Ear aNd aUral Program.
The pilot, which was conducted in two rural Queensland communities for six months, supported trained community pharmacists in conducting ear examinations using video otoscopy and tympanometry for patients that present with an ear complaint.
Participating pharmacies now offer the service independent of the pilot program.
Dr Selina Taylor, Pharmacy Academic, Centre for Rural & Remote Health at James Cook University, said that the LISTEN UP pilot has already seen positive patient outcomes from community pharmacist and GP collaboration.
“Community pharmacists are playing a vital collaborative role in primary healthcare to support rural patients,” Dr Taylor said.
“Participating pharmacists follow the LISTEN UP protocol and make patient recommendations, which could include no treatment, pharmacy-only products, or referral to a general practitioner via an embedded direct referral pathway.
“Many patients present in their community pharmacy with ear pain or a blocked ear.
“The pilot supports those patients to receive primary health care in a timely manner which can reduce potential emergency department presentations or negative patient outcomes.
“Patients have already positively described the service from their local community pharmacy and commented how trusted, trained and knowledgeable their pharmacist is.
“Primary health care professionals, including community pharmacists, GPs, specialist medical officers and others in the rural communities have been collaborating on the LISTEN UP pilot.
“Health outcomes for the local communities continue to be improved through community pharmacists practising towards their full scope and primary health care professionals working together.
“The LISTEN UP pilot is a step in the direction for rural community pharmacists to be working to their full scope of practice and improving patient health outcomes in their local community,” Dr Taylor said.