COMMUNITY PHARMACISTS’ COUNSELLING SKILLS ON OVERTHE-COUNTER (OTC) MEDICATIONS
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Date
2017-01-17Author
Elizabeth Yu Tan
Pratama, Antonius Nugraha Widhi
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Patient counseling is a responsibility of a pharmacist,
more so, for a community pharmacist. It has always
been attached to the roles and responsibilities of a
pharmacist. Patient counselling is a growing
demand by patients who purchase medications in
pharmacies. In Cebu City, patient counselling has
been observed to be rare to none by patients which
can be attributed to many reasons. In a study, Issues
and Concerns on Utilization of the Pharmacy
Workforce in the Philippines by Loquias and Robles
(2012), the researchers found that pharmacists in
the community setting are hard to fill positions.
Pharmacy owners hire even those who have no
plans to stay. Due to the fast turnover of
pharmacists, training and development has become
more costly for owners. This could mean
unavailability of pharmacists in the drugstore at
certain times of the year to provide counseling
service. The community pharmacists are expected to
do managerial tasks such as purchasing and
inventory, sales monitoring, and even personnel
supervision which takes up most of the shift hours of
the pharmacists. Patient counseling takes a
backseat and is only provided when patients asks for
it. In a study on Assessment of Community
Pharmacists Willingness and Barriers of Medication
Therapy Management (MTM) Focused on Pain
Management and Mental Health by Keller, et al.
(2014), community pharmacists strongly agreed that
they will benefit from additional training on pain and
depression medication management. This is the
expressed concern community pharmacists in the
United States of America who have a Doctor of
Pharmacy (PharmD) degree and adequate training to
manage patients.
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