@article {Thomas:1 September 2004:1544-3450:569, author = "Thomas C. Boyle", author = "Jack Coffey", author = "Tony Palmer", title = "Mens Health Initiative Risk Assessment Study: Effect of Community Pharmacy-Based Screening", journal = "Journal of the American Pharmacists Association", volume = "44", year = "1 September 2004", abstract = "Objectives: To determine whether community pharmacists using a risk assessment tool could encourage men who were overdue for a physical examination to visit a physician and to calculate the return on investment from the pharmacy perspective for offering a complimentary risk assessment service.
Design: 12-week, prospective cohort study using convenience sampling among men who visited participating pharmacies. Setting: Cross-section of community pharmacies. Patients: 382 men aged 2574 years with potential health risks that were untreated or uncontrolled, or who had not had a physical examination within the past year. Intervention: Screening for specific health risks with or without telephone follow-up. Main Outcome Measure: Overall male patient response to pharmacist recommendations for follow-up medical care. Results: Of 382 men identified by the Men's Health Risk Assessment Tool (MHRAT) as being at risk for 1,194 significant health conditions (mean, 3.1 conditions per patient), 69% had not received a physical examination from a physician for a period ranging from more than 1 year to 22.6 years. Of men who were recommended to make an appointment, 64% were seen by a physician or were waiting on a scheduled appointment at the end of the study. No differences were seen between the telephone intervention group and the control group in rates of obtaining a physician examination. Conclusion: A positive public health initiative involving community pharmacists was demonstrated in this study. Community pharmacists had a significant impact on motivating men to see a physician for follow-up care once a potential health risk was identified. The MHRAT and the pharmacist recommendation or patient education were the motivating factors and not follow-up telephone interventions by the pharmacist. Given community pharmacists' unique accessibility, an enormous opportunity exists for community pharmacists to raise awareness of men's health care and influence men's health behavior.", pages = "569-577(9)", url = "http://www.ingentaconnect.com/content/apa/japha/2004/00000044/00000005/art00010" doi = "doi:10.1331/1544345041954146" }