Author:
Liaw Siaw-Teng,Peterson Gregory
Abstract
The Australian National Medicines Policy embodies
four tenets: availability, quality, safety and
efficacy of medicines; timely access to affordable
medicines; quality use of medicines (QUM); and a
responsible and viable medicines industry. The
promotion of QUM requires a multidisciplinary
approach, including contributions from government,
the pharmaceutical industry, health professionals,
consumers and academia. However,
there are significant tensions and unintended
effects associated with the multidisciplinary
approach, especially with the relationships
between prescribers and dispensers of medicines.
The general practitioner and the pharmacist share
a common ancestor ? the apothecary. The separation
of dispensing from prescribing, which
began in medieval Europe and 19th century England,
reframed and confined the patient?doctor
relationship to one of diagnosis, prescription and
non-drug management. The role of pharmacists
was limited to dispensing, though the present
trend is for their responsibilities to be widened.
Historical antecedents, the contribution of an
increasing number of actors to the costs of health
care, universal health insurance and an evolving
regulatory framework, are among the factors influencing
doctor?pharmacist relations.
The prescribing and dispensing of medicines must
be guided by an ethical clinical governance structure
encompassing health professionals, regulators,
the pharmaceutical industry and consumers.
There must be close monitoring of safety and
effectiveness, and promotion of quality use of
medicines and improved patient outcomes. Ongoing
training and professional development, within
and across professional boundaries, is essential
to support harmonious and cost-effective interprofessional
practice. The approach must be
?apothecarial? with complementary roles and
responsibilities for the prescriber and dispenser
within the patient?clinician therapeutic relationship, and not adversarial.
Cited by
7 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献