Pharmacy student's awareness and perception of pharmaceutical disposal and its level in tap water

Background: Improper disposal of pharmaceuticals can harm humans, animals, and the ecosystem, with studies finding residues in tap water that may affect drinking water safety. Therefore, this study aims to examine pharmacy student's disposal practices and the association between the Respondents...

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Published in:PHARMACY EDUCATION
Main Authors: Salime, Nurin Izzati; Stanley, Johanna Sophia Anak; Goh, Hui Poh; Ming, Long Chiau; Ramli, Salfarina; James, Richard Johari; Choo, Chee Yan
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: INTERNATIONAL PHARMACEUTICAL FEDERATION 2024
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www-webofscience-com.uitm.idm.oclc.org/wos/woscc/full-record/WOS:001409719400011
author Salime
Nurin Izzati; Stanley
Johanna Sophia Anak; Goh
Hui Poh; Ming
Long Chiau; Ramli
Salfarina; James
Richard Johari; Choo
Chee Yan
spellingShingle Salime
Nurin Izzati; Stanley
Johanna Sophia Anak; Goh
Hui Poh; Ming
Long Chiau; Ramli
Salfarina; James
Richard Johari; Choo
Chee Yan
Pharmacy student's awareness and perception of pharmaceutical disposal and its level in tap water
Education & Educational Research
author_facet Salime
Nurin Izzati; Stanley
Johanna Sophia Anak; Goh
Hui Poh; Ming
Long Chiau; Ramli
Salfarina; James
Richard Johari; Choo
Chee Yan
author_sort Salime
spelling Salime, Nurin Izzati; Stanley, Johanna Sophia Anak; Goh, Hui Poh; Ming, Long Chiau; Ramli, Salfarina; James, Richard Johari; Choo, Chee Yan
Pharmacy student's awareness and perception of pharmaceutical disposal and its level in tap water
PHARMACY EDUCATION
English
Article
Background: Improper disposal of pharmaceuticals can harm humans, animals, and the ecosystem, with studies finding residues in tap water that may affect drinking water safety. Therefore, this study aims to examine pharmacy student's disposal practices and the association between the Respondents' Disposal Practices (RDP) with Demographic Factors (RDF), their knowledge of the impact of improper disposal on tap water quality (KII), awareness of proper disposal practices (KPD), and the availability and accessibility of disposal facilities (AAD). Methods: The questionnaire consisted of a question on RDP as the dependent variable and fifteen questions from four independent variables, namely, RDF, KII, KPD, and AAD. It was distributed online using Google Forms. Descriptive data was analysed using SPSS to investigate the association between dependent and independent variables. Results: There were 175 respondents, and 76.6% of them kept unused or expired medications. The analysis revealed that the RDP were unrelated to the RDF. However, KII and KPD were partially associated with RDP. Lastly, the AAD was strongly associated with RDP. Conclusion: Most respondents were unaware of the proper disposal of unused or expired drugs. The study recommends incorporating proper medication disposal into the pharmacy curriculum and strengthening the medication take-back programme by encouraging community pharmacies to participate in the Medicine Return Programme.
INTERNATIONAL PHARMACEUTICAL FEDERATION
1560-2214
1477-2701
2024
24
1
10.46542/pe.2024.241.688694
Education & Educational Research
gold
WOS:001409719400011
https://www-webofscience-com.uitm.idm.oclc.org/wos/woscc/full-record/WOS:001409719400011
title Pharmacy student's awareness and perception of pharmaceutical disposal and its level in tap water
title_short Pharmacy student's awareness and perception of pharmaceutical disposal and its level in tap water
title_full Pharmacy student's awareness and perception of pharmaceutical disposal and its level in tap water
title_fullStr Pharmacy student's awareness and perception of pharmaceutical disposal and its level in tap water
title_full_unstemmed Pharmacy student's awareness and perception of pharmaceutical disposal and its level in tap water
title_sort Pharmacy student's awareness and perception of pharmaceutical disposal and its level in tap water
container_title PHARMACY EDUCATION
language English
format Article
description Background: Improper disposal of pharmaceuticals can harm humans, animals, and the ecosystem, with studies finding residues in tap water that may affect drinking water safety. Therefore, this study aims to examine pharmacy student's disposal practices and the association between the Respondents' Disposal Practices (RDP) with Demographic Factors (RDF), their knowledge of the impact of improper disposal on tap water quality (KII), awareness of proper disposal practices (KPD), and the availability and accessibility of disposal facilities (AAD). Methods: The questionnaire consisted of a question on RDP as the dependent variable and fifteen questions from four independent variables, namely, RDF, KII, KPD, and AAD. It was distributed online using Google Forms. Descriptive data was analysed using SPSS to investigate the association between dependent and independent variables. Results: There were 175 respondents, and 76.6% of them kept unused or expired medications. The analysis revealed that the RDP were unrelated to the RDF. However, KII and KPD were partially associated with RDP. Lastly, the AAD was strongly associated with RDP. Conclusion: Most respondents were unaware of the proper disposal of unused or expired drugs. The study recommends incorporating proper medication disposal into the pharmacy curriculum and strengthening the medication take-back programme by encouraging community pharmacies to participate in the Medicine Return Programme.
publisher INTERNATIONAL PHARMACEUTICAL FEDERATION
issn 1560-2214
1477-2701
publishDate 2024
container_volume 24
container_issue 1
doi_str_mv 10.46542/pe.2024.241.688694
topic Education & Educational Research
topic_facet Education & Educational Research
accesstype gold
id WOS:001409719400011
url https://www-webofscience-com.uitm.idm.oclc.org/wos/woscc/full-record/WOS:001409719400011
record_format wos
collection Web of Science (WoS)
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