Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Contributors
- Foreword
- Preface
- 1 Non-Medical Prescribing: An Overview
- 2 Non-Medical Prescribing in a Multidisciplinary Team Context
- 3 Consultation Skills and Decision Making
- 4 Legal Aspects of Independent and Supplementary Prescribing
- 5 Ethical Issues in Independent and Supplementary Prescribing
- 6 Psychology and Sociology of Prescribing
- 7 Applied Pharmacology
- 8 Monitoring Skills
- 9 Promoting Concordance in Prescribing Interactions
- 10 Evidence-Based Prescribing
- 11 Extended/Supplementary Prescribing: A Public Health Perspective
- 12 Calculation Skills
- 13 Prescribing in Practice: How It Works
- 14 Minimising the Risk of Prescribing Error
- 15 Education and Training to Become a Prescriber
- 16 Antimicrobial Prescribing
- Index
6 - Psychology and Sociology of Prescribing
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 23 December 2021
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Contributors
- Foreword
- Preface
- 1 Non-Medical Prescribing: An Overview
- 2 Non-Medical Prescribing in a Multidisciplinary Team Context
- 3 Consultation Skills and Decision Making
- 4 Legal Aspects of Independent and Supplementary Prescribing
- 5 Ethical Issues in Independent and Supplementary Prescribing
- 6 Psychology and Sociology of Prescribing
- 7 Applied Pharmacology
- 8 Monitoring Skills
- 9 Promoting Concordance in Prescribing Interactions
- 10 Evidence-Based Prescribing
- 11 Extended/Supplementary Prescribing: A Public Health Perspective
- 12 Calculation Skills
- 13 Prescribing in Practice: How It Works
- 14 Minimising the Risk of Prescribing Error
- 15 Education and Training to Become a Prescriber
- 16 Antimicrobial Prescribing
- Index
Summary
This chapter explores the biopsychosocial factors that influence prescribing behaviour. It begins by introducing theories of behaviour to explore how health systems, pharmaceutical companies, individual professions, roles and identities, colleagues, patients, the time of day, personal beliefs, habits, emotions and the environmental setting can all influence prescribers and their prescribing behaviour. It also discusses the influences of wider society and culture and how that has also shaped healthcare, prescribing practice and patients’ understandings of illness and their expectations around healthcare and treatment. Having taken a look at all these influences on prescribing behaviour, it gives an overview of interventions that help prescribers optimise their prescribing decision making and prescribing behaviours as well as optimise patient satisfaction with and adherence to treatment. These include person-centred and shared decision making, using motivational interviewing to enhance communication during consultations and evidence-based training programmes that have used these approaches to optimise non-medical prescribing.
Keywords
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Independent and Supplementary PrescribingAn Essential Guide, pp. 66 - 86Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2022