Professional Documents
Culture Documents
Professional Pharmacy Practice Federation (IFP) : Global Organizations Pharamacy in The Philippines
Professional Pharmacy Practice Federation (IFP) : Global Organizations Pharamacy in The Philippines
Joeselinne R. Fabillaran
4EPH
in high streets in supermarkets o Collaborating (
or attach to a GPractice. Participate)
❖ Hospital Pharmacist o Communication
- Responsible for the purchase, ❖ The Community Pharmacist
manufacture, dispensing, and - Dispensing/ Pharmacy
supply of all medicines used in assistants
the hospital. - Physicians, dentists, and other
❖ Industrial Pharmacist licensed professionals.
- Have a number of roles - Government officials and
including identifying a employees.
compound which could be used ❖ Hospital Pharmacist
as medicine testing its safety, - Pharmacy team
formulating it into usable - Healthcare professionals
medicine and marketing the involves in patient care.
final product for save and - Hospital administration,
distribution. professional and administrative
❖ Veterinary Pharmacist staffs.
❖ Pharmacy Educators - Community pharmacists
❖ Regulatory Pharmacist (providing patient counseling)
❖ Government Pharmacist ❖ Dispensing/Pharmacy
❖ Corporate Pharmacist Assistants
- Works under the supervision of
HEALTH CARE TEAM
the pharmacist.
❖ Teamwork - Sales of over-the-counter
- The process whereby people medicines and provision of
work together cooperatively to information customer on
deliver goals. symptoms and product.
❖ Required skills - Prescription receipt and
o Listening Skills cohesion(?)
o Questioning Skills - Ordering, receiving, and storing
(involvement, always ask pharmaceutical stocks.
“how and why” things - Preparation of materials for
are done) compounding.
o Respect ❖ Pharmacy Assistants
o Helping - Are person who assist in
o Sharing compounding and dispensing of
medicines in community,
Joeselinne R. Fabillaran
4EPH
hospital, industrial setting and - Maintaining and managing
in other activities, such as, but stock within the pharmacy.
not limited to medical missions, - Record keeping and audit.
under the supervision of the
ROLE IN TEAMWORK
pharmacist, pharmacy aides and
clerks are those who assist in ❖ Essential Skills
other aspects of pharmacy o Leadership (Integrity,
operations. honest, humble,
- It is preferred that these determination,
positions are occupied by those sensitivity, comparison)
who finished pharmacy degree, o Negotiation
not necessarily licensed as o Delegation (be specific,
pharmacists, and who have realistic, time bound,
undergone that prescribed ethical, documents)
training from a commission. CONCORDANCE
(Accredited provider—
Proposed Pharmacy Law ( SB - Occurs when the patient and
3140) healthcare professional
❖ Pharmacy Technicians participate as partners to
research as agreement on when,
Make up prescriptions issued by how, and why to use medicines,
doctors: drawing on the experience of
- Reading prescriptions and the healthcare professional, as
translating doctor’s well as the experiences; beliefs
instructions. and wishes of the patients
- Counting solids and measuring o Intensionally non adherent
liquids. ( may experience side effets)
- Prepare accurate labels for o Unintensionally non
medicines adherent (Patient forget to
- Selling medicines and think or cannot rea the label)
complementary preparations ❖ THREE ESSENTIAL
- Referring to pharmacists when ELEMENTS
appropriate. 1. Includes an explicit
- Small-scale or individual agreement between two
preparation of extemporaneous people.
products. 2. Based upon respect for each
other’s beliefs
Joeselinne R. Fabillaran
4EPH
3. Gives the patient’s view - Decision aids may also be used
❖ EVIDENCE OF a) Information accuracy,
CONCORDANCE comprehensiveness, and
1. Eliciting the patient’s view reliability
- Individual patients will vary in b) Comprehensibility and
their confidence in the target audience
medicine to help them. c) Comprehensibility and
- Patients may believe they will balance of the
become immune or addicted if information
they take it long term. d) References to sources
- May consider over-the-counter e) How up-to-date it is
medicines, particularly in f) Support for shared
comparison with products to be decision making
unnatural, artificial and g) Transparency of
potentially harmful. authorship and
2. Developing rapport with the sponsorship (if any)
patient. 4. Communicating Risk
- Patient communication - To provide information on the
- active listening effectiveness of a medicine or
- avoiding jargon the likelihood of a side effect
- using open questions occurring.
- appropriate body language - Use of both verbal or text
- encouraging patient to ask information and numerical or
questions graphical information on risks
- Treating patient as equal and can aid patient understanding.
being non judgmental - Absolut risk (preferred method
- Empathy for conveying accurate risk
3. Providing Information information)
- Information should be provided
CONCERNS ABOUT
in a manner in which takes
CONCORDANCE
account of what and how much
information they would like to ❖ Issues:
receive. 1. Time
- Verbal information can be - Practice makes for efficiency
supported with written - Address patient issues openly
information like the patient - De-couple the provision of
information leaflet information about option from
Joeselinne R. Fabillaran
4EPH
the constraints in consultation
length.
2. Anxiety
- Present information on both
positive and negative effects of
treatment in a manner
understandable to lay people,
that hints into lay theories of
illness and treatment and which
promotes informed choice.
3. Patient’s Participation
- People need to be involved in
decision making to the extent
that they want to be. The best
way to do this is to ask them.
4. Demands
- Concordance is about both
parties expressing their views
and if as real therapeutic
professional has reservations
about a certain treatment option,
he needs to explain the rationale
to the patient.
Joeselinne R. Fabillaran
4EPH