| Literature DB >> 31817341 |
Abstract
Vaccines represent fundamental public health interventions aimed to counteract or, at least, partially mitigate the severe epidemiological and economic burden generated by communicable disorders, in terms of (i) outcome-related, (ii) behavior-related productivity gains, and (iii) community externalities in developed settings as well as in developing countries. Despite their importance, several parents choose not to immunize their children due to the rising phenomenon of anti-vaccination movements that divulge vaccine-related "fake news" and "post-modern, post-factual truths". Vaccine hesitancy represents a threat that can seriously jeopardize the implementation and success of vaccination campaigns. Within this framework, from a public health perspective, community pharmacies can play a vital role in that pharmacists can: (i) act as immunizers (vaccine distributors, educators, facilitators and administrators), (ii) improve vaccine-related health literacy and vaccination coverage rates as well as (iii) remove barriers and obstacles to the access to healthcare settings offering immunization services and (iv) counteract vaccine hesitancy.Entities:
Keywords: community pharmacies; evidence-based public health and vaccinology; vaccination campaign; vaccine hesitancy
Year: 2019 PMID: 31817341 PMCID: PMC6958368 DOI: 10.3390/pharmacy7040166
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pharmacy (Basel) ISSN: 2226-4787
The role of community pharmacists as immunizers.
| Role of Pharmacist as Immunizer | Details |
|---|---|
| Distributor | Supply and distribute vaccines and immunization products |
| Educator | Improve vaccine-related literacy |
| Facilitator | Hosting healthcare providers (pharmacy-based clinics and similar health-related settings) |
| Administrator | Directly immunize subjects |
The available scientific evidence concerning the involvement of pharmacists as immunizers.
| Impact of Pharmacist as Immunizer | Details | Reference |
|---|---|---|
| Feasibility, acceptability and general effectiveness of PBIS | Highly accepted by patients and community pharmacy staff members | [ |
| Vaccine uptake and immunization coverage rate | RR from 2.64 [95% CI 1.81–3.85] to 2.96 [95% CI 1.02–8.59]; pooled RR 2.74 [95% CI 1.58–4.74] | [ |
| Economic savings | $2.3 million saved in direct healthcare costs and lost productivity at the province level | [ |