Wednesday, February 25, 2015

Dispensing separation is to ensure best care, say pharmacists

The star

BY LOH FOON FONG

PETALING JAYA: Dispensing separation is not about taking away doctors’ rights, but making clear the division of professional responsibilities to ensure best care for patients, the Malaysian Pharma­ceutical Society (MPS) said.
Its community pharmacy chapter chairman Lim Kah Poh said the possibility of undetected prescription errors should not be conveniently brushed aside.
“In dispensing separation, a pharmacist will screen through the prescription to ensure there is no error, and if there is any, he should contact the doctor to clarify,” he said in response to the flurry of comments recently over the matter.
Pharmacists are hoping that the “doctors diagnose, pharmacists dispense” system would be accepted by all by April 1.
Doctors are protesting the move while consumer bodies said the decision of where to get medicines should be left to patients.
On Feb 17, Health Minister Datuk Seri Dr S. Subramaniam said dialogue was still ongoing and no decision has been made by the ministry.
On patients’ willingness to pay higher medicine prices at clinics, Lim said patients should be aware that pharmaceutical companies do attempt to influence doctors to promote one product over another, sometimes to the extent of disregarding safety, efficacy and/or price.
Lim, who is also in MPS’ task force against inducement of health professionals, also asked why some health professionals preferred to prescribe pricier “branded or innovator drugs” over generic versions.
“The healthcare system should be designed to safeguard the health of the people,” he said, though admitting that inducement could also apply to pharmacists, thus underscoring the need for policing in this area as well.
Community pharmacist Gan Ber Zin said doctors only attended a one-year lecture on pharmacology in their five-year medicine course.
Pharmacists, on the other hand, were trained from formulation drugs to monitoring side-effects, and would screen every dispensed drug for possible interaction with other drugs, food and other substances.
“There is no justification to delay the implementation of the prescribing and dispensing functions for doctors and pharmacists,” he said.
According to Gan, such separation was already in place in the public sector, while private hospitals were working towards the same.
“Why are private sector pharmacists in community pharmacy practice not treated the same?”.

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