PHARMACIST CHALLENGES FACED IN INDIA

 PHARMACIST CHALLENGES FACED IN INDIA

The profession of Pharmacy is an integral part of the healthcare system worldwide. Pharmacies with well-organized practice can go a long way to ensure quality health care for the patient. In the past, pharmacists were responsible for dispensing medications only. Slowly, the traditional role of pharmacists is expanding and now pharmacists are playing a role as a vital team member in the direct care of patients, especially the new generation pharmacists who have Pharm. Ds. Pharmacists play a major role in providing healthcare services by means of community pharmacy services in rural areas where physicians are not available or where physician services are too costly for meeting the healthcare necessities. Many reforms are yet needed to improve job satisfaction among Indian pharmacists such as higher salaries, more job opportunities in government offices, recognition of pharmacists as health care professionals, and changes in the Pharm. D and pharmacy curriculum. This report looks at the current issues with the pharmacy profession in India and provides possible recommendations to improve job satisfaction among Indian pharmacists.

Introduction

Pharmacists comprise the third largest healthcare professionals in the world and the pharmacy profession have been evolving steadily over the last decade in India.

1.Today, pharmacists have expanded their role from dispensing to pharmaceutical care by maximizing the benefits of medications and their safety.

2. With the increase in work-related activities, it has directly or indirectly influenced the quality of work delivery and job satisfaction in pharmacists. Job satisfaction is defined as the reaction of workers with respect to their roles in the organization that employs them.

3. It is the degree of favourableness with which employees view their work and are an important contributing factor towards a person’s motivation and productivity.

4. It can determine whether an employee will remain in a position or seek work elsewhere. Furthermore, job satisfaction can influence the quality of work produced.5 Lower level of job satisfaction is directly associated with lower life satisfaction and has an effect on an individual’s life.6 Job satisfaction affects the lives of all workers, including health workers. Both job satisfaction and motivation play an important role in job retention and increased productivity of health workers which in turn improves health system performance.7,8 Difficulty in retaining clinical staff in low and middle-income countries makes the already inadequate health care system more fragile. Thus, pharmacists’ satisfaction with their work affects not only employees and employers, but also patients who receive the pharmacists’ services.

Salaries and job opportunities

Payscale should be reasonable and competitive for every specialty of the pharmaceutical field to prevent exploitation since the salaries are considerably less in private hospitals, community pharmacies and the industry.10 Pharmacy governing bodies like the Pharmacy Council of India (PCI) and the All India Council for Technical Education (AICTE) should stop issuing licenses for opening a new pharmacy institutions due to the current lack of vacancies for already passed out graduates and due to the prevailing concern about the quality of education provided in pharmacy institutions. More job opportunities should be created for passed out graduates in the government and private sector. All states should implement the Drug and Cosmetics Act, 1945 like Maharashtra so that more pharmacists can procure jobs in community pharmacies with a good pay scale. In addition, PCI should maintain electronic records of registration details and contacts of pharmacists working across the nation (including academia) as well as the available job vacancies.

Recognition of pharmacists

Pharmacists can play an important role in providing quality health care by working along with physicians. A team of 5–6 pharmacists should be appointed in PHCs(Primary Health Centres) at the panchayat level and in CHCs (Community Health Centres) at the block/tehsil level. There should be the presence of a pharmacy officer working under a medical officer at the CHC and PHC level and similarly in each district, there should be the presence of a chief pharmacy officer (CPO) working under a chief medical officer (CMO). Drug inspectors must be appointed at the tehsil level in addition to their appointment at the district or regional level for proper regulation. Pharmacy teachers and pharmacists working in hospitals and industries should be given due recognition, especially in the pharmaceutical industry where many art and science graduates occupy many of the pharmacy-based jobs. The Department of Pharmaceuticals (DoP) should be recognized as part of the Ministry of Health and not as part of the Ministry of Chemicals & Fertilizers, both at the central level and the state level since pharmaceutical products.

Working practice

Pharmacists should be majorly involved in and employed for manufacturing pharmaceuticals due to their expertise in the field. Presently, a number of art and science graduates with no basic knowledge about pharmaceuticals work in pharmaceutical industries.9,10 Some measures to be taken by PCI to improve pharmacy practice should be prohibiting physicians from storing medicines in absence of a pharmacist, compulsory mention of the name of the pharmacist who dispensed the prescription along with the name of the physician who issued the prescription, prohibiting pharmacists from the sale of prescription medications over the counter, renaming “medical stores” as “pharmacies”, making the hiring of pharmacists mandatory in addition to procuring a pharmacist licensure in pharmacies run by non-pharmacists and trying to limit working hours for practicing pharmacists to a maximum of 8 hours per day.

Education

The practice of earning a diploma in pharmacy as the minimum requirement to be a registered pharmacist should be discontinued and all the students should be compulsorily made to earn a 4 year degree course in pharmacy since India is one of the few countries that allows candidates earning both, a 2-year diploma as well as a 4-year degree program in pharmacy respectively, to practice as independent pharmacists. This practice is unlike the developed countries, where candidates holding a diploma in pharmacy do not hold as many powers and responsibilities as candidates holding a 4 year pharmacy degree. Candidates with a diploma in pharmacy might not have as much knowledge as the candidates with a 4-year pharmacy degree. Also, the diploma in pharmacy curriculum is not updated on a regular basis which stresses the importance of procuring the four-year bachelors of pharmacy (B.Pharm) degree. B.Pharm must be the preferred qualification for pharmacists instead of D.Pharm. Pharmacy Council of India (PCI) states that B.Pharm graduates should register under state pharmacy council and become registered pharmacists after being issued a certificate from the State Pharmacy Council. However, in spite of being registered as pharmacists, they are not eligible for pharmacist vacancies in health care centers.


How pharmacists can help solve medication errors?

In today’s health care system, no one person – maybe not even you – knows exactly what drugs you’re taking. What’s more, no one health care provider knows how you, the patient, take your medications, and at what doses. No single, up-to-date record consistently displays all of this important information.

The lack of an accurate medication list and the associated lack of centralized and expert management of your full drug regimen has serious consequences.

A 2016 study at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine suggested that medical errors are the third leading cause of death in the United States. Many of these deaths are directly related to errors associated with medications. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimates 1 million visits to emergency rooms each year stem from adverse medication events.

In addition, thousands of people are harmed by suboptimal medication management, or because they don’t take their medications as directed. And millions of health care dollars are wasted each year in the form of duplicated or unneeded drugs and medication-related hospital readmissions.

As dean of the UCSF School of Pharmacy, a school defined by science, as well as a researcher who has strived to improve the effectiveness and safety of medications, I think the key to solving these problems are to expand the role of pharmacists. My position on this point is based on accumulating evidence.

Investigating the problem

In a 2015-2016 project, UCSF School of Pharmacy pharmacists compared the accuracy of the medication lists of 135 newly discharged patients with the medications the patients actually ended up taking. Not one of these lists completely reflected medication use at home, despite the fact that each patient had been recently discharged from a controlled hospital environment.

Common errors included:

 

1.       Duplication of therapy (either getting two of the same medication or two drugs in the same class).

2.       Omitted but necessary medications.

3.       Unreported use of herbals or dietary supplements.

The path forward

I am hopeful the results of our pilots suggest a way forward.

As the above examples suggest, pharmacists can increase the efficiency and impact of a whole health care team. Pharmacists have been doing this for years in hospitals, and it’s time for them to do it in the community as well. For patients, that means having a professional consistently reviewing the accuracy of their medication lists and ensuring all drugs are safe and effective.

Pharmacists know how drugs act and interact in the body. They are experts regarding medication choice and side effects. And they understand how to work with insurers on behalf of their patients. Their mission is to ensure the individual patient is receiving the right drugs at the right time, and that the drugs are safe, effective, and affordable. They’re also generally adept at determining if the patient is willing and able to take the needed medication. Pharmacists have the credentials and training to perform all these critical tasks. They carry doctoral degrees and, of course, must be licensed to practice.

Some progress has been made in expanding the role of pharmacists to ensure patients are receiving safe, effective medication therapy.

I believe the pharmacist is the medication expert that’s needed to implement the complete solution. And our evidence suggests that this approach is effective.

Let pharmacists do their best work

Ensuring an accurate, managed medication list for each patient would require a radical change in the business of health care. The current community pharmacy business model is based upon the volume of drugs dispensed. In a new patient-centered model, pharmacists would be reimbursed for dispensing their advice to patients, just as they are for dispensing drugs. In this model, the pharmacist is a critical member of the patient’s health care team.

A tectonic shift in business models might seem like a lot to ask, but empowering pharmacists with the ability to fully apply their extensive medication knowledge is an obvious next step toward ensuring patients receive the safest, most effective drug therapy.

Couple the power of an accurate medication list with the medication expertise and management of the pharmacist, and I see patient health improving, adverse drug events falling, and health care dollars being saved in the process.

For the future, a much better solution is possible: A medication expert will take full responsibility for reviewing your list with you. This expert will ensure that the medications you’re taking are safe, work for you, and are affordable. This expert will consider your personal situation and all your health conditions in relation to the medications and will address any concerns with fellow providers on your health care team.


By:- Mr.KRISHNATEJA NUKALA
4th YEAR B-PHARMACY
GLAND INSTITUTE OF PHARMACUETICAL SCIENCES

Comments

Aneesha said…
Its a detailed explanation of the scenario Teja. very well done .keep it up .

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