Stocking and over-the-counter sale of misoprostol for medical abortion in Ghana’s community pharmacies: comparison of questionnaire and mystery client survey
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International Journal of Pharmacy Practice
Abstract
Objectives In many sub-Saharan African countries with restricted safe abortion
services, community pharmacies are important sources of abortifacients. However,
data on stocking and over-the-counter sale of abortifacients in community
pharmacies are often limited. The main objective of this study was to compare
stocking and over-the-counter sale of misoprostol at community pharmacies
using questionnaire and mystery client surveys in Ghana.
Methods A cross-sectional questionnaire-based survey, complemented with a
mystery client survey, was conducted at 165 randomly selected community
pharmacies in Accra, Ghana. Structured questionnaires were administered to
pharmacists/pharmacy workers. A mystery client survey to each of these pharmacies
was also undertaken. Descriptive statistical techniques (frequencies and
proportions) were used to estimate and compare stocking and over-the-counter
sale of misoprostol at community pharmacies from the two data collection
methods.
Key findings Some 50.3% (83) of community pharmacists/pharmacy workers
reported stocking misoprostol and selling it over-the-counter for medical abortion
in the questionnaire-based survey. However, in the mystery client survey,
122 (74%) pharmacists/pharmacy workers reported stocking misoprostol and
actually selling it over-the-counter to the mystery clients. Thus approximately
39 (24%) more pharmacies stocked misoprostol and sold it over-the-counter
even though they originally denied stocking the drug in the questionnaire survey.
Also, the drug was often sold without a prescription, and many did so
without asking for a confirmatory pregnancy test or gestational age.
Conclusions In contexts where access to safe abortion services is restricted,
mystery client surveys, rather than conventional questionnaire-based survey
techniques, may better illuminate stocking and over-the-counter sale of abortifacients
at community pharmacies.
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Research Article
