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2.
BMJ Glob Health ; 6(5)2021 05.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: covidwho-1238523

RESUMEN

The recent growth of medicine sales online represents a major disruption to pharmacy markets, with COVID-19 encouraging this trend further. While e-pharmacy businesses were initially the preserve of high-income countries, in the past decade they have been growing rapidly in low-income and middle-income countries (LMICs). Public health concerns associated with e-pharmacy include the sale of prescription-only medicines without a prescription and the sale of substandard and falsified medicines. There are also non-health-related risks such as consumer fraud and lack of data privacy. However, e-pharmacy may also have the potential to improve access to medicines. Drawing on existing literature and a set of key informant interviews in Kenya, Nigeria and India, we examine the e-pharmacy regulatory systems in LMICs. None of the study countries had yet enacted a regulatory framework specific to e-pharmacy. Key regulatory challenges included the lack of consensus on regulatory models, lack of regulatory capacity, regulating sales across borders and risks of over-regulation. However, e-pharmacy also presents opportunities to enhance medicine regulation-through consolidation in the sector, and the traceability and transparency that online records offer. The regulatory process needs to be adapted to keep pace with this dynamic landscape and exploit these possibilities. This will require exploration of a range of innovative regulatory options, collaboration with larger, more compliant businesses, and engagement with global regulatory bodies. A key first step must be ensuring that national regulators are equipped with the necessary awareness and technical expertise to actively oversee this e-pharmacy activity.


Asunto(s)
Salud Global , Servicios Farmacéuticos , Farmacia , Tecnología , COVID-19 , Humanos , India , Kenia , Legislación de Medicamentos , Nigeria , Servicios Farmacéuticos/tendencias , Farmacias , SARS-CoV-2
3.
J Am Pharm Assoc (2003) ; 60(6): e113-e115, 2020.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: covidwho-731813

RESUMEN

In response to the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic, many industries, including pharmacy, rapidly expanded the use of telecommuting workers to assure business continuity and address social distancing needs. Advances in electronic health records and telepharmacy over the past 2 decades enabled pharmacy leaders to easily adapt their practice models to allow for telecommuting alternatives during the pandemic. While these changes were generally intended to be part of the short-term response, the sustained expansion of telecommuting within the pharmacy profession merits further exploration. Documented experience with telepharmacy and telehealth indicate a wide array of clinical and operational pharmacist activities that could be conducted by telecommuters. In addition, experience with telecommuters in other industries suggests potential benefits ranging from improving pharmacists' work-life balance to mitigating postpandemic financial burden. Health care organizations should consider integrating part-time telecommuter pharmacists into contemporary practice models to address other frontline issues and facilitate ongoing expansion of clinical pharmacy services to meet emerging patient needs.


Asunto(s)
Tratamiento Farmacológico de COVID-19 , Servicios Farmacéuticos/organización & administración , Farmacéuticos/organización & administración , Rol Profesional , Telecomunicaciones/organización & administración , Registros Electrónicos de Salud , Satisfacción en el Trabajo , Servicios Farmacéuticos/tendencias , Farmacéuticos/normas , SARS-CoV-2 , Telecomunicaciones/tendencias
5.
J Am Pharm Assoc (2003) ; 60(6): e95-e99, 2020.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: covidwho-701882

RESUMEN

As the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic continues its course in 2020, telehealth technology provides opportunities to connect patients and providers. Health policies have been amended to allow easy access to virtual health care, highlighting the field's dynamic ability to adapt to a public health crisis. Academic detailing, a peer-to-peer collaborative outreach designed to improve clinical decision-making, has traditionally relied on in-person encounters for effectiveness. A growth in the adoption of telehealth technology translates to increases in academic detailing reach for providers unable to meet with academic detailers in person. The U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) has used academic detailing to promote and reinforce evidence-based practices and has encouraged more virtual academic detailing (e-Detailing). Moreover, VA academic detailers are primarily clinical pharmacy specialists who provide clinical services and education and have made meaningful contributions to improving health care at VA. Amid the COVID-19 pandemic and physical isolation orders, VA academic detailers have continued to meet with providers to disseminate critical health care information in a timely fashion by using video-based telehealth. When working through the adoption of virtual technology for the delivery of medical care, providers may need time and nontraditional delivery of "evidence" before eliciting signals for change. Academic detailers are well suited for this role and can develop plans to help address provider discomfort surrounding the use of telehealth technology. By using e-Detailing as a method for both familiarizing and normalizing health professionals with video-based telehealth technology, pharmacists are uniquely poised to deliver consultation and direct-care services. Moreover, academic detailing pharmacists are ambassadors of change, serving an important role navigating the evolution of health care in response to emergent public health crises and helping define the norms of care delivery to follow.


Asunto(s)
COVID-19/terapia , Servicios Farmacéuticos/organización & administración , Pautas de la Práctica en Medicina/organización & administración , Telemedicina/organización & administración , Toma de Decisiones Clínicas , Instrucción por Computador , Medicina Basada en la Evidencia , Difusión de la Información , Relaciones Interprofesionales , Servicios Farmacéuticos/tendencias , Pautas de la Práctica en Medicina/tendencias , SARS-CoV-2 , Telemedicina/normas , Estados Unidos , United States Department of Veterans Affairs
6.
Aust J Gen Pract ; 49(8): 530-532, 2020 08.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: covidwho-691741

RESUMEN

BACKGROUND: During the COVID-19 pandemic, vulnerable and older people with chronic and complex conditions have self-isolated in their homes, potentially limiting opportunities for consultations to have medications prescribed and dispensed. OBJECTIVE: The aim of this article is to describe initiatives to ensure ongoing access to medications during the COVID-19 pandemic. DISCUSSION: Cooperation between wholesalers and purchase limits in pharmacies have helped to ensure supply of essential medications. Therapeutic substitution by pharmacists is permitted for specific products authorised by the Therapeutic Goods Administration. Prescribers are permitted to issue digital image prescriptions, and implementation of electronic prescribing has been fast-tracked. Expanded continued dispensing arrangements introduced during the bushfire crises have been temporarily extended. Pharmacists are permitted to provide medication management reviews via telehealth. A Home Medicines Service has been introduced to facilitate delivery of medications to people who are vulnerable or elderly. Anticipatory prescribing and medication imprest systems are valuable for access to end-of-life medications within residential aged care.


Asunto(s)
Infecciones por Coronavirus , Medicamentos Esenciales/provisión & distribución , Accesibilidad a los Servicios de Salud/organización & administración , Administración del Tratamiento Farmacológico , Pandemias , Servicios Farmacéuticos , Neumonía Viral , Anciano , Australia/epidemiología , Betacoronavirus , COVID-19 , Infecciones por Coronavirus/epidemiología , Infecciones por Coronavirus/prevención & control , Prescripción Electrónica , Humanos , Administración del Tratamiento Farmacológico/organización & administración , Administración del Tratamiento Farmacológico/tendencias , Afecciones Crónicas Múltiples/terapia , Pandemias/prevención & control , Servicios Farmacéuticos/organización & administración , Servicios Farmacéuticos/tendencias , Neumonía Viral/epidemiología , Neumonía Viral/prevención & control , SARS-CoV-2 , Telemedicina/métodos , Telemedicina/organización & administración , Telemedicina/tendencias
7.
Res Social Adm Pharm ; 17(1): 1978-1983, 2021 01.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: covidwho-34770

RESUMEN

The coronavirus disease-19 (COVID-19) is caused by the novel severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus that was first detected at the end of December 2019. The epidemic has affected various regions of China in different degrees. As the situations evolve, the COVID-19 had been confirmed in many countries, and made a assessment that it can be characterized as a pandemic by the World Health Organization on March 11, 2020. Drugs are the main treatment of COVID-19 patients. Pharmaceutical service offers drug safety ensurance for COVID-19 patients. According to COVID-19 prevention and control policy and requirements, combined with series of diagnosis and treatment plans, pharmacists in the first provincial-level COVID-19 diagnosis and treatment unit in Jilin Province in Northeast China have established the management practices of drug supply and pharmaceutical care from four aspects: personnel, drugs supply management, off-label drug use management and pharmaceutical care. During the outbreak, the pharmaceutical department of THJU completed its assigned workload to ensure drug supply. So far, no nosocomial infections and medication errors have occurred, which has stabilized the mood of the staff and boosted the pharmacists' confidence in fighting the epidemic. For the treatment of COVID-19, pharmacists conducted adverse reaction monitoring and participated in the multidisciplinary consultation of COVID-19. Up to now, the COVID-19 patients admitted to THJU have not shown any new serious adverse reactions and been cured finally. The hospital pharmacy department timely adjusted the work mode, and the formed management practices is a powerful guarantee for the prevention and control of the COVID-19 epidemic. This paper summarized the details and practices of drug supply and pharmaceutical services management to provide experience for the people who involving in COVID-19 prevention and contain in other abroad epidemic areas.


Asunto(s)
COVID-19/terapia , Hospitales/provisión & distribución , Uso Fuera de lo Indicado , Preparaciones Farmacéuticas/provisión & distribución , Servicios Farmacéuticos/provisión & distribución , Servicio de Farmacia en Hospital/provisión & distribución , COVID-19/epidemiología , China/epidemiología , Epidemias , Hospitalización/tendencias , Hospitales/tendencias , Humanos , Servicios Farmacéuticos/tendencias , Servicio de Farmacia en Hospital/tendencias
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