| Literature DB >> 21612642 |
Clémence Perraudin1, Françoise Brion, Olivier Bourdon, Nathalie Pelletier-Fleury.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: In the last decades, the provision of pharmaceutical care by community pharmacists has developed in OECD countries. These developments involved significant changes in professional practices and organization of primary care. In France, they have recently been encouraged by a new legal framework and favored by an increasing demand for health care (increase in the number of patients with chronic diseases) and reductions in services being offered (reduction in the number of general practitioners and huge regional disparities).Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21612642 PMCID: PMC3115856 DOI: 10.1186/1472-6904-11-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Clin Pharmacol ISSN: 1472-6904
Description of the nine pharmacists' practices.
| Dimension 1: Screening and chronic disease management | |
|---|---|
| Individual interview in a confidential area to inform and counsel the patient by explaining the treatment, its side effects, and drug interactions, and any follow-up to be adopted. | |
| Practical tools for the patient to acquire skills to manage their disease and its care and supervision in partnership with health-care providers. | |
| A protocol allowing the community pharmacist, chosen by the patient, to periodically renew chronic treatments, adjust dosage (if necessary), and make medication-use reviews (side effects, observance, follow-up) at a doctor's request or with his consent. | |
| Offering screening procedures for certain ailments to patients using easily administered tests such as blood pressure, expiratory flow rate, and blood-sugar levels. | |
| Making an electronic file for each patient containing all drugs dispensed to the patient during the last four months for his or her own personal consumption, with or without medical prescription, in any pharmacy that is equipped for such recording. | |
| A professional opinion, under the pharmacist's authority, on the pharmaceutical appropriateness of one or a series of treatments to be dispensed by the pharmacist. This is to be communicated on a standardized form to the prescriber of the medication and/or to the patient when the pharmacist recommends a revision or to justify his refusal to dispense a medication as prescribed. | |
| Dispensing certain medications without a medical prescription or advising patients to consult a doctor, following appropriate questioning of the patient to determine the gravity of the symptoms of his or her ailment. | |
| Direct public access to medications referred to as "pharmaceutical products" in specific, clearly identified locations in very close proximity to where medications are dispensed, and providing the public with information from respected health-care authorities relative to the appropriate use of these products. | |
| Group discussions with GPs and/or other specialists to discuss the clinical situation of patients for whom they jointly provide care, such as in the framework of health-care networks. | |
Figure 1Final-year pharmacy students' opinions on expanding the scope of the pharmacist's practices (%).
Figure 2The potential obstacles to developing new pharmacists' practices (%).