|
1-26-01From:
Mike
Ivey,
RPh Executive Vice-President
of Recruitment at RPhLink. RPhLink.com offers Pharmacists and
Pharmacy Techs a wide range of Pharmacy Business opportunities.
Pharmacists and Techs are Linking to the site to get current Pharmacy
Business News and Great Job Opportunities.. for Pharmacy Grads and Interns.
Allergan presents ACULAR
PF, the only
preservative-free topical NSAID |
The Present
and the Future of Pharmacy
In the last
quarter century, pharmacy has expanded its role within the health
care delivery system from a profession focusing on preparation and
dispensing of medications to patients to one in which pharmacists
provide a range of patient-oriented services to maximize the
medicine's effectiveness. Medicines today have great power to heal
and to improve the quality of life for millions of Americans. But
medicines also may do serious harm if not taken correctly. This is
where the role of the pharmacist is most important.
Pharmacists
practice in a number of health care settings including hospitals,
clinics, nursing homes, health maintenance organizations, LTC,
academia, research and others. However, nearly everyone is familiar
with community pharmacists and the pharmacy in which they practice.
Six out of every ten pharmacists provide care to patients in a
community setting. You probably visit the community pharmacist more
often than you do any other member of the health team. Pharmacists
talk to people when they are healthy and when they are sick, when
they are "just browsing" or when they are concerned with an
emergency; when they have specific needs as well as when they are
seeking advice or information.
Community
pharmacists are playing an increasing role in the "wellness"
movement, especially through counseling about preventative medicine.
Pharmacists serve patients and the community and by referring
patients to other sources of help and care, such as physicians, when
necessary. Likewise, advances in the use of computers in community
pharmacy practice now allow pharmacists to spend more time educating
patients and maintaining and monitoring patient records. As a result,
patients have come to depend on the pharmacist as a health care and
information resource of the highest caliber.
Community
pharmacists, in addition to the variety of tasks performed in and out
of the pharmacy, are specialists in the science and use of
medcations. They are knowledgeable about the composition of drugs,
their chemical and physical properties, and their manufacture and
uses. Additionally, a pharmacist understands the activity of a drug
and how it will work within their body. More and more prescribers
rely on pharmacists for information about the various drugs, their
availability and their activity just as patrons do when they ask
about nonprescription medcations.
The community
pharmacist is in an ideal position both to ensure that drugs are used
in the safest and most effective way possible, and to encourage
appropriate self-care. In addition, since people trust pharmacists as
educated and approachable health professionals, they often present
them with a variety of nonmedication-related questions concerning
such issues as birth control or alcohol abuse. For practical purposes
in day-to-day practices, community pharmacists are central in helping
patients receive the most benefit from the medications we provide. |