Iris Publishers - Current Trends in Clinical & Medical Sciences (CTCMS)
Scope of Tele-Pharmacists in Pandemic Situations of Bangladesh
Authored by Mohiuddin AK
Bangladesh’s health care services
are becoming unusually concentrated in a small fraction of costly critical
health-demanding patients. A large part of these complex-patients suffers from
multiple chronic diseases and are spending a lot of money. Tele-pharmacy
includes patient counselling, medication review and prescription review by a
qualified pharmacist for the patients who are located at a far distance from
the pharmacy. The most common way to use telemedicine is a responsive model,
primarily physician-led with virtual visits stimulated by alerts using
interactive services, which facilitates real-time interaction between the
patient and provider [1]. It delivers resilience to services and enables
pharmacists to work remotely, reducing the need for long journeys and
increasing job satisfaction [2]. The rise of pharmacists in epidemic situations
has become increasingly popular in developed countries such as the United
States, Australia, Canada and the United Kingdom. According to information from
recent published articles in several ongoing journals, books, newsletters,
magazines, etc., the duties, authority and responsibilities of pharmacists are
completely different from doctors and nurses, although there are some similarities.
Along with doctors, pharmacists can serve as frontline healthcare workers
during epidemics. The profession is developed and highly praised in both
developed and underdeveloped countries. Millions of professional pharmacists
worldwide work in various organizations, and according to data from the
International Pharmaceutical Federation (FIP), nearly 75% of them work in
patient care [3]. Even in the United States, the continued lacking of primary
health providers and medical specialists has made it possible for pharmacists
to care for ambulatory patients with chronic diseases in a variety of treatment
services [4,5] Figure 1.
Present Socio-Economic and
Healthcare Situation
Bangladesh is the seventh most
populous country in the world and population of the country is expected to be
nearly double by 2050 [6], where communicable diseases are a major cause of
death and disability [7]. A recent Dengue outbreak in 2019, more than 100,000
people was affected in more than 50 districts in Bangladesh in the first 6 months
of 2019 [8, 9]. According to World Bank’s Country Environmental Analysis (CEA)
2018 report, air pollution lead to deaths of 46,000 people in yearly in
Bangladesh [10]. Although a riverine country, 65% of the population in
Bangladesh do not have access to clean water [11]. Both surface water and
groundwater sources are contaminated with different contaminants like toxic
trace metals, coliforms as well as other organic and inorganic pollutants [5].
Studies in capital Dhaka and Khulna also found that about 80% of fecal sludge
from on-site pit latrines is not safely managed [12]. Nearly half of all slum
dwellers of the country live in Dhaka division [13] and 35% of Dhaka’s
population are thought to live in slums [14]. A recent research demonstrates
widespread poor hygiene and food-handling practices in restaurants and among
food vendors [15]. Less than 10% hospitals of this country follow the Medical
Waste Management Policies [16]. In 2017, 26 incidents of disease outbreak were
investigated by National Rapid Response Team (NRRT) of IEDCR [17]. Economic
development and academic flourishment do not represent development in health
sector. Out of the pocket treatment cost raised nearly 70% in the last decade
[18]. Although, officially 80% of population has access to affordable essential
drugs, there is plenty of evidence of a scarcity of essential drugs in
government healthcare facilities [19]. Surprisingly, the country’s
pharmaceutical sector is flourishing, exports grew by more than 7% in last 8
months although total export earnings of the country drop to nearly 5% [20]. It
has been found in Bangladesh that more than 80% of the population seeks care
from untrained or poorly trained village doctors and drug shop retailers [21].
According to WHO, the current doctor-patient ratio in Bangladesh is only 5.26
to 10,000 that places the country at second position from the bottom, among the
South Asian countries [22]. According to World Bank data, Bangladesh has 8
hospital beds for every 10,000 people; by way of comparison, the US has 29
while China has 42 [23]. Tobacco is responsible for 1 in 5 deaths in
Bangladesh, according to the WHO, kills more than 161,000 people on average
every year. Around 85% population of age group 25-65 never checks for diabetes
[24, 25].
Pharmacy Education in Bangladesh
Pharmacy Education in many
developing countries, including Bangladesh, is still limited to didactic
learning that produce theoretically ‘skilled’ professionals with degrees.
Pharmacy curriculum in Bangladesh do not satisfy the minimal requirement for
appropriate education in clinical, hospital and community pharmacy, since they
are still linked to an old model of pharmacy activity e.g. based on chemistry
and basic sciences. That is present curriculum produces Pharmacist only to work
in the pharmaceutical industry and jobs in this field of work is going to be
saturated. No university so far have modified their curriculum including topics
as epidemiology, pharmaco-economics, clinical medicines, community skills.
Manpower development for community pharmacies in Bangladesh is not
systematically regulated and constitute an important public health issue. Three
levels of pharmacy education are currently offered in Bangladesh leading to
either a university degree, a diploma or a certificate. Graduates with degrees
work in industry while those with diplomas work in hospitals [26]. Pharmacy is
taught in about 100 public and private universities in Bangladesh and about
8000 pharmacy students graduate every year [27]. Hospital, community and clinical
pharmacy in Bangladesh have not been well developed due to lack of government
policy [28]. In real conditions of Bangladesh pharmacy practice areas for
graduate pharmacist is limited in industry i.e., industrial pharmacy practices,
in the marketing or regulatory sections. The educational system of pharmacy is
one of the major reasons for bounded pharmacy practices because the courses
included in bachelor degree principally emphasize on industrial practices [29].
Over 90% of B. Pharm curriculum emphasizes on product-oriented knowledge
whereas only around 5% of the total course credits are allocated toward
clinical pharmacy. This curricular framework indicates a minimum emphasis on
patient care education [30]. However, the graduates who pass out do not get
employment easily due to their poor training, lack of in-depth knowledge of
fundamental concepts and practical skills [17]. Consequently, skilled graduates
leave for overseas where they find more prosperous jobs. Researchers argued
that Pharmacy Education can be able to contribute for both public and private
benefits if a realistic pattern is ensured on its operation [31]. This system
could be more beneficial to the public if the good hospital and community
practices are introduced properly and also by involving the pharma
professionals e.g. pharmacists and other skilled health care providers.
Present State of Pandemic
Situation Handling by Bangladeshi Hospitals
More than half of the 88 coronavirus cases detected in Bangladesh have been reported in the capital Dhaka [32,33]. The virus hit a total of 11 out of the 64 districts in the country until 05.04.2020 after the first known cases were reported around a month ago, according to the government’s disease control agency IEDCR [34]. Amidst this global crisis, Bangladesh has been identified as one of the 25 most vulnerable countries to be affected by the fastspreading virus. By 16.04. 2020, it was confirmed in 43 districts [35]. Many patients with fever, cold and breathing problems-which are also COVID-19 symptoms – have gone untreated as the hospitals in Dhaka are sending them to the IEDCR for coronavirus test [36]. Many doctors are not providing services fearing the contagion and lab technicians are shunning workplaces halting medical tests, according to the patients. In some cases, serious patients who are not affected by COVID-19, moved from one hospital to the other but could not receive treatment and finally died, the media reported. In another case, the doctor fled leaving the patient behind [37-40]. Doctors and other healthcare workers say they do not have adequate personal protective equipment and the health system cannot cope with the outbreak [41]. Police have locked down a total 52 areas of Dhaka after Covid-19 positive patients were found in the localities [42]. Experts say elderly people infected with coronavirus need ICU support the most. The number of older persons in the country is over 0.8 million [43]. The country’s entire public health system has less than 450 ICU beds, only 110 of which are outside the capital Dhaka [23]. The economic shutdown sparked by COVID-19 threatens millions of livelihoods in the country imminently. Law enforcers have been struggling to enforce shutdown and keeping people confined to their homes but people often ignored their request and instructions [44].
Under Utilization of Hospital
Pharmacy
The pharmacy profession is still
lagging behind in developing countries as compared with developed countries in
a way that the pharmacy professionals have never been considered as a part of
health care team neither by the community nor by the health care providers.
Although hospital pharmacists are recognized for its importance as health care
provider in many developed countries, in most developing countries it is still
underutilized or underestimated [45-48]. Hospital pharmacy practice is just
started in some private modern hospitals in Bangladesh which is inaccessible
for the majority of peoples due to high patients cost of these hospitals [49].
People are totally unknown to the responsibilities of hospital pharmacist, even
they don’t seek for recruit for hospital pharmacist in any hospital except a
few aristocrat hospitals [50]. A survey in Dhaka reported that 48% of
respondents with symptoms of acute respiratory illness (ARI) identified local
pharmacies as their first point of care. Licenses are provided to drug sellers
by the Directorate General of Drug Administration when they have completed a
grade C pharmacy degree (i.e. 3 months course) to legally dispense drugs [51]
but a grade A pharmacy degree holder, having a B. Pharm or Pharm. D degree
should be more equipped to handle these situations, if trained properly.
Knowledge and helpfulness of pharmacist were identified as two major
determinants that could not only satisfy and but also promote willingness to
pay for the service [52]. They can individualize the medications and their
dosing according to the needs of the patient, which can minimize the cost of
care for the medication. In Bangladesh, however, graduate pharmacists do not
engage directly in-patient care. Here, pharmacies in hospitals are primarily
run by non-clinically educated, diploma pharmacists [28]. If the hospital
pharmacy is established, patient care, proper dispensing of medications, and
other patient-oriented issues can be handled properly. By maintaining a
hospital pharmacy quality control program, the health sector can be enriched.
Prospect of Pharmacists in Patient
Management Service and Telehealth Care
Pharmacists are the third largest
healthcare professional group in the world after physicians and nurses [53]. At
present, Hospital Pharmacy has created enormous job opportunities, where
graduate pharmacists play a vital role in patient rearing, rehabilitation and
wellness. A professional pharmacist or a pharmacy apprentice at a clinic,
hospital and community care can determine what to do in a given disease
situation, if guided properly by another medical personnel [54-56]. The country
has a huge opportunity to recruit these pharmacists at Telehealth Care. In each
call, a pharmacist can provide both appropriate and quality information from
the most recent medical systems. Studies show that the lack of proper
medication management leads to higher healthcare costs, longer hospital stays,
morbidity and mortality. Further, it was reported that one in every five
hospitalizations was related to post-discharge complications and about seventy
percent were related to proper use of the drug. In 2017, the World Health Organization
committed to minimizing serious, avoidable drug-related harm over the next 5
years. Pharmacists’ interventions to prevent drug-related problems at three
community hospitals in California saved approximately 0.8 million USD in a year
[57]. The estimated annual cost of medication error-based illnesses and deaths
worldwide was USD 500 billion due to non-compliance with the clinical
intervention and quantities in 2016. Also, the authors estimate that more than
275,000 people die every year for the same reasons [58]. A pharmacist can use
simple and non-medical terminology to set the goal for patients to understand
the information as well as to fulfill the prescription by proper request. With
chronic conditions such as cardiovascular and respiratory diseases, there is
ample evidence of the effectiveness of the tele-pharmacist for remote
monitoring, communication and consultation [59]. In addition, psychotherapy can
also be operated through telehealth as part of behavioral health [60]. The
pharmacyrelated needs of pandemic patients have similarities with the
traditional patient population, but with different emphasis [61]. For example,
when providing consulting services to patients, instead of focusing on
medications as usual, their queries relate primarily to the knowledge of
medical prevention and basic details on COVID-19, such as mask selection and
standard COVID-19 signs and symptoms, symptomatic treatment options, breathing
difficulties or cough management in comorbid situations, reinforcing behaviors
that limit the spread of the pandemic, including social distancing and
remaining in the home whenever possible through phone calls/ video conferencing
[62,63]. Earlier, Student pharmacists served as an effective education resource
for patients regarding the H1N1 pandemic [64].
Conclusion
Overburdened by patient loads and
the explosion of new drugs, physicians turned to pharmacists more and more for
drug information, especially within institutional settings. They obtain medical
and medication history, check medication errors including prescription,
dispensing and administration errors, identify drug interactions, monitor ADR,
suggest individualization of dosage regimen, provide patient counseling, etc.
[65]. Among chronic disease patients, particularly those under quarantine,
there is a greater challenge in the supply of drugs and compliance with
medications, although the safety and effectiveness of care is still critical
for these patients. Stronger data on the effectiveness of this area of pharmacy
care, together with a critical assessment of its limitations, can raise
awareness among the actors involved about its potential and could contribute to
a wider dissemination of telepharmacy services in public interest [66]. At the
end, it can be said that pharmacists can play a role in both medical aids and
regulation. Similarly, in tele-healthcare, the professional pharmacist can play
an essential role that has not been recognized yet due to lack of proper
initiatives. We hope that policy makers of Bangladesh are aware of its
potential and contribute to the wider promotion of telepharmacy services in the
interest of the citizenry
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