Patient and Physician Attitudes to Using Medications with Religiously Forbidden Ingredients
Autor: | Sriram Ramaswamy, Frederick Petty, Mohammed Shakeel Ahmed, Subhash C. Bhatia, Denise R Olsen, Shahid Ellahi, James Madison, Farhan Majeed, Daniel R. Wilson, S. Pirzada Sattar |
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Rok vydání: | 2004 |
Předmět: |
Adult
Male Inert Ingredients medicine.medical_specialty Meat Attitude of Health Personnel Swine Chemistry Pharmaceutical Culture Alternative medicine MEDLINE Drug Prescriptions Informed consent medicine Animals Humans Pharmacology (medical) In patient Physician-Patient Relations business.industry Religion and Medicine Middle Aged Family medicine Cattle Female business Healthcare providers |
Zdroj: | Annals of Pharmacotherapy. 38:1830-1835 |
ISSN: | 1542-6270 1060-0280 |
DOI: | 10.1345/aph.1e001 |
Popis: | BACKGROUND Over 1000 medications contain pork- and/or beef-derived gelatin and stearic acid as inert ingredients. Use of these medications in patients with religious beliefs against consumption of these ingredients might constitute an ethical conflict. OBJECTIVE To assess patients’ and physicians’ attitudes about using medications with religiously prohibited ingredients derived from pork and/or beef. METHODS In this pilot study, 100 patients and 100 physicians completed a survey designed to assess their knowledge and opinion on using medications that might contain inert ingredients derived from animals whose consumption offends followers of certain religions. RESULTS Of the 100 patients surveyed, most (84%) reported that they were not aware that several medications contained ingredients derived from pork and/or beef. About 63% of the patients wanted their physicians, and 35% of the patients wanted their non-physician healthcare providers (pharmacists, nurses), to inform them when using such medications. Thirteen percent of the patients shared religious reasons for not consuming pork and/or beef products. Approximately 70% of physicians were unaware that several medications contain ingredients that might be against their patients’ religion, and most (70%) thought that it was important to inform their patients if such drugs were prescribed. CONCLUSIONS This pilot study suggests that both patients and physicians think that patients should be informed whenever medications that contain pork- and/or beef-derived products are prescribed. The use of medications with these ingredients is an ethical issue. Informing patients about this issue promotes respect for their religious beliefs and may promote therapeutic alliance; therefore, this might have public health implications and needs further research. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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