Council of Europe Resolution on the Implementation of Pharmaceutical Care—A Step Forward in Enhancing the Appropriate Use of Medicines and Patient-Centred Care
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. Pharmaceutical Care
1.2. Development of the Resolution CM/Res(2020)3
2. Discussion
2.1. Pharmaceutical Care and Patient Care
2.2. Pharmaceutical Care Services in the Community Pharmacy Setting
2.3. Pharmaceutical Care Services in the Hospital Pharmacy Setting
2.4. Pharmaceutical Care and the Health Service
- Integration of pharmacists and pharmaceutical care within the health services. Pharmacists, as experts in medicines, already advise and inform patients about the use of medicines, but are underutilised in service development and delivery [19,62]. Recognition of pharmacists as providers of care and as members of multidisciplinary teams is essential to maximising use of their skills in a patient-centred health service [63]. Community and hospital pharmacists, as well as those in primary care practices, residential care homes and detention settings, should have the authority to deliver pharmaceutical care and a framework within which to do so.
- Evaluation of the scale of poor quality of medication use (prescription and non-prescription) and its impact on the health service using a systems approach [54]. Inadequate data and data in siloes contributes to the lack of comprehensive and holistic assessment of these data with consequently inadequate responses to poor medicine use [55,64]. Policies should include pharmaceutical care and leverage pharmacist expertise both nationally and locally to optimise medicine use and address medicine shortages and public health emergencies.
- Interprofessional collaboration needs to be incorporated into practice in health services. It must be mandated and supported in co-located, but especially in dispersed, practices. Interprofessional collaboration is integral to pharmaceutical care and helps ensure the coordination and continuity of service provision [62,65,66].
- Digital systems and procedures to connect pharmacists should be an integral part of the implementation of eHealth policies. This will remove barriers that prevent the sharing of data needed for safe and effective care. Support for both face-to-face and remote consultations and recording of pharmaceutical care interventions will capture data essential for the monitoring and evaluation of service quality.
- Realigning services and resources to support the role of pharmacists as care providers. For example, community pharmacists are only considered part of primary care in a few countries and are remunerated in most of them, mainly for the dispensing of medicines. Hospital pharmacy departments have their staffing complements and budgets based on the purchase and distribution of medicines and not on the need for clinical pharmacy services. The focus on the supply of medicines is reinforced by misaligned resourcing which creates inefficiencies and is a major barrier to the introduction of pharmaceutical care and to change throughout health services [67].
- Workforce planning to ensure an adequate supply of pharmacists and other pharmacy team members. Pharmacy is often excluded from consideration because it is seen as a support service by other healthcare professionals and health service managers. This leads to gaps in the skilled workforce necessary for the implementation of pharmaceutical care, the optimisation of medicine use and the development of the health service [68].
- Continuous professional development (CPD) for pharmacists to support the change in their scope of practice, improve collaboration and provide high-quality, standardised and appropriately certified healthcare services, e.g., vaccination.
- Commitment from health services to establish and sustain the facilities in which the clinical experiential placements and interprofessional education necessary for pharmaceutical care can be delivered. Pharmacy education uses competency frameworks to prepare pharmacists to deliver pharmaceutical care and advanced practitioners but needs support from the health services, professional bodies and academic institutions to create the foundations for cooperation and collaboration in professional practice [68,69].
- Pharmaceutical care programme development and continuous quality improvement (CQI). Evaluation and CQI measures should be used to monitor implementation, to quality-assure service delivery and to assess the outcomes.
Concept, Sector. | Problem(s) | Intervention(s) | Impact(s) |
---|---|---|---|
Pharmaceutical Care | The medicine use process from medicine selection, prescribing and dispensing to patient education is a series of uncoordinated steps to supply the medicine. This leads to suboptimal medicine selection, use and monitoring. At present, policy initiatives tend to focus on a single step which produces limited benefits and unintended consequences. | Pharmacist offers to take responsibility for the quality of medicine use and for the health outcomes. Pharmacists have the necessary expertise and share the duty of care with the prescriber for prescription medicines and with the patient for non-prescription medicines. | Creates a coordinated, structured process that resolves problems with medicines through increasing patient-centred care provided by pharmacists and enhancing collaboration with prescribers [10,15]. |
Primary Care | Fragmented primary care systems lead to ineffective episodes of care, medication errors and unnecessary referral to hospital. Shortages of prescribers in primary care lead to poor access and excessive workload. | Pharmacists working in their community practices can provide access to preliminary assessment, screening, treatment of minor illnesses, medication review, monitoring, support and appropriate referral. | Care can be provided when it is needed, at the level that is needed [18,65]. Those with chronic conditions can be cared for at home for longer and vulnerable groups can be cared for in the community [16,31]. More complex cases can be referred to the appropriate service and unnecessary admissions avoided [16,64]. |
Acute Hospital Sector | Patients with multiple morbidity, those with acute conditions and those requiring intensive monitoring all need medicines—these may be combinations of medicines, specialist medicines for acute and high-risk conditions and medicines that must be monitored intensively. | Medicine reconciliation on admission, integrating clinical pharmacists with specialist teams, reviewing and monitoring medicine use and outcomes in vulnerable patients, medicine review and counselling at discharge [42,43]. | Reduction in medicine-related errors and problems [5]. Improved patient safety at transitions of care and in high-risk circumstances [24]. Optimisation of medicine use increases the quality of care and reduces the length of stay and unscheduled readmission [49,50]. |
Residential Care | Patients unable to live independently often receive multiple medicines (polypharmacy) but may be infrequently assessed. Unnecessary and inappropriate medicines can reduce the patient’s quality of life and increase the likelihood of hospital admission. | Medication review by pharmacists and multidisciplinary team reviews to optimise medicines. Guidance and advice for care teams concerning medicine use, monitoring and discontinuation. | Reduction in polypharmacy and inappropriate medicines will decrease prescribing cascades. Improved medicine use policies will reduce the burden of medicine management on care staff [52,53]. |
Public Health | Patients with minor illnesses attending general practitioners unnecessarily add to workload and consume scarce resources. Patients with symptoms not assessed and appropriately referred in a timely manner. | Programmes to assess and treat minor illnesses based in community pharmacies. Screening, monitoring and referral, for example, for blood pressure and atrial fibrillation. | Reduced costs and effective treatment of minor illnesses [27]. More effective use of pharmacists and general practitioners [20]. Early detection, reduction in uncontrolled conditions and appropriate referral [25]. |
Response times to epidemics and access to vaccinations have been shown to be inadequate. | Vaccine administration through community pharmacies. | Increased proportion of population vaccinated [20,37]. | |
Poor access to medicines that are time-critical, such as adrenaline for serous allergic reactions and emergency hormonal contraception. | Medicines for emergency administration made available through community pharmacies. | Increased access and availability of medicines for emergency situations. |
2.5. Pharmaceutical Care and Health Policy
- Vision of pharmacists as providers of pharmaceutical care. Pharmaceutical care is a patient-centred, collaborative model of care that harnesses the pharmacist’s expertise to tackle the pervasive problem of poor medicine use—the societal consequences of which are growing. Pharmaceutical care is a key policy to address this problem
- Changing pharmacists’ scope of practice. New models of care, new technology and new medicines challenge traditional forms of professional practice throughout healthcare. Not only may legal and regulatory change be required but also substantial cultural and organisational change. Policy makers’ engagement is essential to establishing constructive engagement from stakeholders and achieving practical reform of scopes of practice to deliver patient-centred health services.
- Health financing and resource allocation should promote patient care. Many aspects of the funding for healthcare systems discourage and impede pharmacists from providing pharmaceutical care. Instead, they focus on medicine availability and costs. Pharmaceutical care and reform of medicine supply schemes should go hand-in-hand in order to optimise the use of resources. This major change can only be delivered with the support of all the relevant government departments.
- Integration of pharmaceutical care in every setting in which medicines are used. Fragmentation and uncoordinated healthcare delivery exacerbate poor medicine use and reduce the effectiveness and efficiency of health services. Pharmacists, as medicine experts and providers of pharmaceutical care, should be utilised throughout government and health services to develop policy and to oversee its implementation. eHealth policies must enable pharmacists to access, share and contribute to the exchange of health information upon which integrated care depends.
- Comprehensive workforce planning and education reform to provide enough pharmacists and advanced practitioners to meet the needs of the health services, public health policy, academic practice and the pharmaceutical industry [68,69]. Pharmacy is a relatively small profession (compared to medicine and nursing) and while many countries recognise the need for a skilled workforce for the pharmaceutical industry, few are making adequate provision for the pharmaceutical needs of health services or have a vision for research and development that will also stimulate innovation in patient care.
3. Further Work with the Resolution
4. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Henman, M.C.; Ravera, S.; Lery, F.-X. Council of Europe Resolution on the Implementation of Pharmaceutical Care—A Step Forward in Enhancing the Appropriate Use of Medicines and Patient-Centred Care. Healthcare 2024, 12, 232. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare12020232
Henman MC, Ravera S, Lery F-X. Council of Europe Resolution on the Implementation of Pharmaceutical Care—A Step Forward in Enhancing the Appropriate Use of Medicines and Patient-Centred Care. Healthcare. 2024; 12(2):232. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare12020232
Chicago/Turabian StyleHenman, Martin C., Silvia Ravera, and Francois-Xavier Lery. 2024. "Council of Europe Resolution on the Implementation of Pharmaceutical Care—A Step Forward in Enhancing the Appropriate Use of Medicines and Patient-Centred Care" Healthcare 12, no. 2: 232. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare12020232
APA StyleHenman, M. C., Ravera, S., & Lery, F.-X. (2024). Council of Europe Resolution on the Implementation of Pharmaceutical Care—A Step Forward in Enhancing the Appropriate Use of Medicines and Patient-Centred Care. Healthcare, 12(2), 232. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare12020232