Pharmaceutical Care
Pharmaceutical Care
Pharmaceutical Care
• Theme
• Pharmaceutical care as a generalist practice,
Pharmaceutical care as primary health care, Medication
Management service in the medical home,
pharmaceutical care as a new Paradigm, The practice of
pharmaceutical care
• page: 57-73
• The practice of pharmaceutical care has been
developed as a generalist practice.
• This is significant because clinical pharmacy
practice developed as a specialty practice.
• Generalist practitioner
Definition: A generalist practitioner is one who
provides continuing, comprehensive, and
coordinated care to a population
undifferentiated be gender, disease, drug
treatment category.
Other characteristics within this comprehensive definition of generalist
practitioner include:
These include:
• Patient-centeredness
• Addresses both acute and chronic conditions
• Emphasizes prevention
• Documentation systems continuously record patient need and care
provided
• Accessible, frontline, first contact
• Continuous and systematic care
• Integration of care
• Accountability
• Emphasis on ambulatory patients
• Includes education/health promotional intervention
• Hepler and Strand in 1990 published a paper
that provide the conceptualization of
pharmaceutical care that stimulated
widespread debate within the profession.
• Pharmaceutical Care is that component of
pharmacy practice which entails the direct
interaction of the pharmacist with the patient
for the purpose of caring for the patient’s
drug-related needs.
• “Pharmaceutical care is a necessary element of
health care, and should be integrated with other
elements.
• Pharmaceutical care is, however, provide the
direct benefit of the patient, and the pharmacist is
responsible directly to the patient for the quality
of that care.
• The fundamental relationship in pharmaceutical
care is mutually beneficial exchange in which the
patient grants the authority to the provider and
the provider gives competence and commitment
to the patient.”
Standard of Care 1: Collection of Patient-Specific
Information
• The practitioner collects relevant patient-specific information to use in decision-making
concerning all drug therapies.
• Measurement Criteria
• 1. Pertinent data are collected using appropriate interview techniques.
• 2. Data collection involves the patient, family and care-givers, and health care providers when
appropriate.
• 3. The medication experience is elicited by the practitioner and incorporated as the context
for decision-making.
• 4. The data are used to develop a pharmacologically relevant description of the patient and
the patient's drug-related needs.
• 5. The relevance and significance of the data collected are determined by the patient's
present conditions, illnesses, wants, and needs.
• 6. The medication history is complete and accurate.
• 7. The current medication record is complete and accurate.
• 8. The data collection process is systematic and ongoing.
• 9. Only data that are required and used by the practitioner are elicited from the patient.
• 10. Relevant data are documented in a retrievable form.
• 11. All data elicitation and documentation is conducted in a manner that ensures patient
confidentiality.
Standard of Care 2: Assessment of Drug-Related Needs
The practitioner analyzes the assessment data to determine if the patient's drug-
related needs are being met, that all the patient's medications are appropriately
indicated, the most effective available, the safest possible, and the patient is able and
willing to take the medication as intended.
Measurement Criteria
• 1. The patient-specific data collected in the assessment are used to decide if all of the patient's
medications are appropriately indicated.
• 2. The data collected are used to decide if the patient needs additional medications that are not
presently being taken.
• 3. The data collected are used to decide if all of the patient's medications are the most effective
products available for the conditions.
• 4. The data collected are used to decide if all of the patient's medications are dosed
appropriately to achieve the goals of therapy.
• 5. The data collected are used to decide if any of the patient's medications are causing adverse
effects.
• 6. The data collected are used to decide if any of the patient's medications are dosed
excessively and causing toxicities.
• 7. The patient's behavior is assessed to determine if all his or her medications are being taken
appropriately in order to achieve the goals of therapy.
Standard of Care 3: Identification of Drug Therapy
Problems
Measurement Criteria
• 1. Drug therapy problems are identified from the assessment findings.
• 2. Drug therapy problems are validated with the patient, his/her family, care-
givers, and/or health care providers, when necessary.
• 3. Drug therapy problems are expressed so that the medical condition and the
drug therapy involved are explicitly stated and the relationship or cause of the
problem is described.
• 4. Drug therapy problems are prioritized, and those that will be resolved first
are selected.
• 5. Drug therapy problems are documented in a manner that facilitates the
determination of goals of therapy within the care plan.