Jamaica Gleaner

‘We are more than pill pushers’

Pharmacist­s still not included in COVID-19 vaccinatio­n drive

- Erica Virtue Senior Gleaner Writer erica.virtue@gleanerjm.com

THE GOVERNMENT is yet to incorporat­e pharmacist­s into its COVID-19 vaccinatio­n drive, months after sector players qualified to administer shots indicated their willingnes­s to participat­e in the exercise to boost take-up of the jabs.

Since The Sunday Gleaner highlighte­d t he matter a few months ago, there has been no movement on the offer. Instead, the Government has sought the use of the plants operated by pharmacist­s as vaccinatio­n sites, but the requiremen­ts are so onerous that many have declined.

“Still no pharmacist­s involved in the vaccinatio­n programme, and to the best of my knowledge, only Fontana Pharmacy is being used as a site for vaccinatio­ns,” Dr Winsome Christie, president of the Pharmaceut­ical Society of Jamaica, told The Sunday Gleaner recently.

She said that the pharmacist­s remain blocked by legislativ­e hurdles, which they have been pleading with lawmakers to clear for almost a decade.

Christie said that recent dialogue has suggested that the Ministry of Health and Wellness is working to get pharmacist­s involved, and despite the snail’s pace of progress, she is hoping there will be a breakthrou­gh soon before the island experience­s its fourth COVID wave.

“I am not worried that it will take a long time because I have seen other legislatio­n move swiftly,” said Christie. “But I want the nation to know that pharmacist­s are willing and ready. We have about 56 trained at the moment and most are in the private sector. The Government tends to work with those in the public sector.”

VANGUARDS OF HEALTHCARE

Audley Reid is a trained pharmacist and executive of pharmaceut­ical distributo­rs R.A. Williams. He and his sister manage the company, which was founded by their now-deceased mother.

Speaking with our news team on the eve of Pharmacy Week, which runs November 21 to 27, he expressed concern that pharmacist­s have not been given the space to assist in the COVID-19 fight.

“We see ourselves as not only pharmacist­s in the broader profession, but in the purpose to serve as healthcare providers. We are more than just pill pushers or pill counters. We are vanguards of healthcare, and we needed to have put on our thinking caps amid the crisis to see what actions we could have taken,” he told The Sunday Gleaner.

“We recognised that supply chains would be locked down and so we needed to act, through ingenuity and being decisive through decisionma­king. That’s how we acted, so we could provide the consistent supply of drugs that would be needed,” he explained.

Although not among those trained and certified to administer shots, he expressed interest in making the step.

“Whenever you have a public-health crisis like this, the Government must move quickly to mobilise all available options to them. The Disaster Risk Management Act was drafted and enacted in a short space of time, and one clause that could have been included under the health section was the authorisat­ion for pharmacist­s to administer the vaccine,” he told The Sunday Gleaner, noting that pharmacist­s were trusted by the populace and are often the first point of call for individual­s who are sick.

In 2016, Health Minister Dr Christophe­r Tufton said that the ministry would be looking at the Pharmacy Act to see what amendments could be made to incorporat­e pharmacist­s more into healthcare delivery to reduce the burden on the public health sector.

The Public Health Act currently specifies who can administer vaccines in Jamaica and Section 14 notes that said the minister may make regulation­s for vaccinatio­ns and inoculatio­ns.

However, the pharmacist­s have not been the only personnel not fully engaged in the vaccinatio­n drive. In October, Tufton said that more than 100 doctors in private practice would be engaged to administer COVID-19 jabs free of cost. Two weeks later, only about 15 were engaged across the island, with the ministry saying that it was hoping that more of the 150 doctors with whom they were having discussion would come on board.

“I am not sure exactly what is required. I just did not bother to go back because I opted initially to find out how I could help, but the requiremen­ts were too onerous, man, and when you are renting space for your own practice, you have to examine your investment­s,” said a doctor in private practice.

Among the requiremen­ts was that there be a refrigerat­or specifical­ly designated for the storage of vaccines. The doctor said that was an investment he was prepared to make.

Up to Friday, Jamaica had recorded 90,630 cases of COVID19 with 2,356 confirmed deaths. Some 341 other deaths are being investigat­ed.

Some 1,071,648 COVID-19 jabs have been administer­ed across the island, the health ministry’s vaccinatio­n tracker showed yesterday. Roughly 491,000 Jamaicans have been fully vaccinated.

 ?? IAN ALLEN/PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? Some 1,071,648 COVID-19 jabs have been administer­ed across the island, the health ministry’s vaccinatio­n tracker showed yesterday. Roughly 491,000 Jamaicans have been fully vaccinated.
IAN ALLEN/PHOTOGRAPH­ER Some 1,071,648 COVID-19 jabs have been administer­ed across the island, the health ministry’s vaccinatio­n tracker showed yesterday. Roughly 491,000 Jamaicans have been fully vaccinated.
 ?? FILE ?? In September, Minister of Health and Wellness Dr Christophe­r Tufton signed a deal with Alanah Jones, special project manager of Fontana Pharmacy, for the entity to assist in the island’s COVID-19 vaccinatio­n drive.
FILE In September, Minister of Health and Wellness Dr Christophe­r Tufton signed a deal with Alanah Jones, special project manager of Fontana Pharmacy, for the entity to assist in the island’s COVID-19 vaccinatio­n drive.
 ?? Dr Winsome Christie, president of the Pharmaceut­ical Society of Jamaica. ??
Dr Winsome Christie, president of the Pharmaceut­ical Society of Jamaica.

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