Table 5.
NPT | Barriers | Facilitators | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
1. Coherence | ||||
1.1 Differentiation | HP | Fear PGxT may replace (rather than complement) existing prescribing practices [62,67,68] | B | Perception that PGx offers an improved approach to prescribing [62,64,88] |
Pa | Perception that PGxT is an extension of the medical model of psychiatry [64] | B | ||
B |
|
|||
1.2 Communal Specification |
B | Lack of consensus about purpose and potential benefits of PGxT [65,67,75,81,87] |
B | Perception that PGx is a tool to help guide prescribing and support clinical decisions to improve prescribing outcomes [62,63,67,68,72,75,76,77,79,81,83,84,89] |
HP | B | |||
Pa | Pa | Additional information and counselling given to patients during PGxT helps feel more informed about their medication and illness [68,77,84] | ||
1.3 Individual Specification |
HP | Lack of understanding about what PGxT entails and requires of them [66,67,68,81,87] | HP | Experience helped stakeholders understand what PGx requires of them [65,68] |
B | Patient lack of awareness about what PGxT is [68,70,73,74,75,82,84] | HP |
|
|
Pa | Patient understanding of PGxT involves for them may fluctuate based on mental health status [64] | HP | Prescribers believed not acting on or using PGx results would not cause liability issues [65] | |
1.4 Internalisation |
B | Belief that PGx currently lacks evidence to support clinical utility, specifically for: [62,65,72,79,87,88] | B | Perception that PGx has a range of potential HCP, individual, and system benefits and values: [62,63,81,83,84,87,88] |
HP | HP | |||
HP | B | |||
B |
|
B | ||
B | Concern that PGxT may cause harm or distress [63,65,66,67,68,71,72,75,77,83] | HP | Belief that PGx can help engage patients in shared decision making [67,68,69,85] | |
HP | B | Agreement that PGx can reassure patients by reducing uncertainty about taking a medicine [67,68,69,73,83,84] | ||
B | HP |
|
||
B | Perception that PGxT is not cost-effective [68,76,81] | B | PGx can validate previous medication experiences [67,68,76,83,87,88] |
|
2. Cognitive Participation | ||||
2.1 Initiation |
Ps | Some psychiatrists do not believe they are appropriate to drive implementation, in part due to: | B | Strong interest in adopting PGxT, due to belief it will yield patient, HCP, and system benefits [62,65,66,72,73] |
Ps | HP | Belief that pharmacists are important in PGx implementation [62,68,90] | ||
Ps |
|
HP | MDT approach to monitoring PGx outcomes is desired [86,90] | |
2.2 Enrolment |
B | Perceived difficulty to integrate PGx into existing clinical pathways and services [69,70,88] | HP | Willingness from psychiatrists and prescribers to engage with other HCPs during implementation, particularly [68,86,90]: |
Ph | ||||
HP | ||||
HP | Trust is key when HCPs collaborate on PGx [69,90] | |||
2.3 Legitimation |
Ps | Psychiatrist uncertainty about when to offer PGxT to patients—some psychiatrist sub-populations less likely to consider PGxT were: [66,75] |
Ps | Psychiatrists believe PGx should be within their scope of practice [66,71,72] |
Ps |
|
Ps |
|
|
Ps |
|
Ph | Pharmacists perceive PGx to be part of their clinical role expansion [90] | |
Ps | Perception amongst psychiatrists that others in the profession lack the knowledge required to utilise PGxT [63] | |||
2.4 Activation |
B | Ethical concerns about PGx tasks and activities [62,75,83,84] | HP | Agreement in tasks required to sustain PGx [68,72] |
HP | HP | |||
B | HP | Belief that they can facilitate PGx-related activities [67,68,86] | ||
Ps | Psychiatrist concern about capacity to counsel patients about PGx and depth of information to provide [75,88] | B | Educating patients is essential [65,86] and improves their perception of PGx [68,70,76,82] | |
HP | Concern about updating PGx results—as new evidence emerges [69,83] | |||
3. Collective Action | ||||
3.1 Interactional Workability |
HP | PGx may create extra burden during prescribing [67,68,69,75] | ||
HP | ||||
B | HP | PGx can help make prescribing decisions easier when PGx is delivered in a timely and accessible manner [74] | ||
HP |
|
B | PGx can make it easier to build patient rapport [66,67,83] | |
Ps | ||||
B | PGx may hinder rapport-building with patients [62,63,75] | |||
B | Risk of misinterpretation of PGx results, particularly traffic-light systems of reporting that may oversimplify decision-making [68,76,88] | |||
3.2 Relational Integration |
B | Lack of confidence in PGxT as an intervention, due to doubts over: [65,68,76,83,85] | HP | Perception that PGxT is safe and reliable helped contribute to confidence in PGxT as an intervention [62,68,72,75] |
HP | HP | A belief that PGxT is a promising strategy to prescribing that will change practice and become a normal part of prescribing [62,66,71,72,75,85,87,89,90] | ||
Ps | ||||
B | ||||
3.3 Skillset Workability |
HP | HCP knowledge and expertise gap for PGx in psychiatry [66,68,75,81,87] | HP | Relevant training and experience helps HCPs to be sufficiently knowledgeable and confident to use PGx [65,66,72,80] |
Ps | B | Stakeholders are enthusiastic to learn more about PGx [62,66,70,75] | ||
Ps |
|
HP | ||
Ps | Patient perception that HCPs may lack expertise to offer and use PGxT [83] | Ph | Pharmacists are confident in identifying when to offer PGx [66] and provide PGx counselling [90] | |
Pa | Depressed patients have the psychological capacity to deal with PGx results [77] | |||
B | PGx education informs patients and manages expectations [76] | |||
3.4 Contextual Integration |
HP | Perceived lack of internal and external policy on PGx [71] | HP | Belief that psychiatry specific, practical PGx guidelines would help implementation [65] |
HP | Belief that there is a lack of basic and specialised education and training about PGx [62,63,68,72,75,90] | HP | Perception that national and international policy on PGx would help implementation [63,65,86] | |
HP | A notion there is a lack of guidance and resources available to implement PGx [62,63,65,71,87] | HP | Staff and leadership engagement helped local implementation [80,86] | |
Pa | Patients perceived to have a lack of education and awareness about PGx [70,73,74,82] | HP | Adoption of local PGx champions helps implementation [80,86] | |
4. Reflexive Monitoring | ||||
4.1 Systemisation |
||||
4.2 Individual Appraisal |
HP | HCPs used their own clinical judgement to appraise PGx outcomes [90] | ||
4.3 Communal Appraisal |
||||
4.4 Reconfiguration |
HP | Preference to adapt PGx for specific contexts, based on experience and feedback [88] |
Description: Displayed in the table are the constructed barriers and facilitators mapped onto different constructs and sub-constructs of the NPT framework, and which stakeholder group the barrier or facilitator was constructed from: HP = healthcare professional, Pa = patient, B = both, Ps = psychiatrist and Ph = pharmacist. Sub-themes start with bullet points. ⇩ = decreased; ⇧ = increased.