TY - JOUR
T1 - Access to syringes at pharmacies (ASAP)
T2 - Preliminary impact of a pharmacy-level intervention
AU - Meyerson, Beth E.
AU - Linde-Krieger, Linnea B.
AU - Agley, Jon
AU - Vadiei, Nina
AU - Crosby, Richard A.
AU - Bentele, Keith G.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 The Authors
PY - 2026/1/1
Y1 - 2026/1/1
N2 - Background: Community pharmacies are important access points for services to reduce bloodborne illnesses (BBIs) like HIV and Hepatitis C. However multiple barriers limit pharmacy provision of these services, including stigma toward people who use drugs (PWUD) and staff discomfort with harm reduction practices. Objective: This study evaluated a pharmacy-level intervention called Access to Syringes at Pharmacies (ASAP) designed to increase nonprescription syringe sales and reduce stigma. Methods: A one-armed pilot study was conducted with 18 staff of 3 community pharmacies located in 3 different Arizona counties from January to April 2022. Data were collected through monthly surveys measuring staff comfort with selected harm reduction practices and stigma toward PWUD. Ecological momentary assessment tracked dispensing behaviors. Linear mixed effects models with bootstrapping analyzed changes over time. Results: All 3 pharmacies reported selling syringes without a prescription during the study period, with variation in number of sales events between the pharmacies. The number of pharmacy staff who reported “always” dispensing syringes without a prescription increased from 44.4% at baseline to 77.8% by study end. Comfort with harm reduction practices increased significantly immediately following training (β = 0.39). Stigma scores decreased significantly both immediately post-training (β = −0.41) and at study end (β = −0.34). Throughout the intervention, higher stigma scores were consistently associated with lower likelihood of syringe dispensing (r > −0.45). Conclusions: The ASAP intervention provides reason for optimism for effective pharmacy-based education to increase nonstigmatized syringe dispensing to reduce BBIs and infections. Future studies should evaluate ASAP in a larger, controlled trial across diverse pharmacy settings to establish causal relationships and optimize implementation strategies.
AB - Background: Community pharmacies are important access points for services to reduce bloodborne illnesses (BBIs) like HIV and Hepatitis C. However multiple barriers limit pharmacy provision of these services, including stigma toward people who use drugs (PWUD) and staff discomfort with harm reduction practices. Objective: This study evaluated a pharmacy-level intervention called Access to Syringes at Pharmacies (ASAP) designed to increase nonprescription syringe sales and reduce stigma. Methods: A one-armed pilot study was conducted with 18 staff of 3 community pharmacies located in 3 different Arizona counties from January to April 2022. Data were collected through monthly surveys measuring staff comfort with selected harm reduction practices and stigma toward PWUD. Ecological momentary assessment tracked dispensing behaviors. Linear mixed effects models with bootstrapping analyzed changes over time. Results: All 3 pharmacies reported selling syringes without a prescription during the study period, with variation in number of sales events between the pharmacies. The number of pharmacy staff who reported “always” dispensing syringes without a prescription increased from 44.4% at baseline to 77.8% by study end. Comfort with harm reduction practices increased significantly immediately following training (β = 0.39). Stigma scores decreased significantly both immediately post-training (β = −0.41) and at study end (β = −0.34). Throughout the intervention, higher stigma scores were consistently associated with lower likelihood of syringe dispensing (r > −0.45). Conclusions: The ASAP intervention provides reason for optimism for effective pharmacy-based education to increase nonstigmatized syringe dispensing to reduce BBIs and infections. Future studies should evaluate ASAP in a larger, controlled trial across diverse pharmacy settings to establish causal relationships and optimize implementation strategies.
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105021250334
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105021250334#tab=citedBy
U2 - 10.1016/j.japh.2025.102947
DO - 10.1016/j.japh.2025.102947
M3 - Article
C2 - 41109671
AN - SCOPUS:105021250334
SN - 1544-3191
VL - 66
JO - Journal of the American Pharmacists Association
JF - Journal of the American Pharmacists Association
IS - 1
M1 - 102947
ER -