The Hamilton Spectator

New role for pharmacist­s raises questions, concerns

- ELIZABETH ALVAREZ ELIZABETH ALVAREZ IS A MEDICAL DOCTOR.

There has been much reporting on pharmacist­s prescribin­g for minor ailments, but much of that was around increased access. However, there are also very serious concerns and unaddresse­d questions around this topic.

I will summarize them here, and but the list is not exhaustive.

The main concern is that pharmacist­s are not trained to obtain medical histories or perform physical exams to diagnose and treat medical conditions, which can lead to misdiagnos­es and worse outcomes.

As doctors, we are trained to do a differenti­al diagnosis, which means we have to figure out what the problem is among many possible problems.

An example is that people can have lower belly pain for many reasons, some of those reasons are serious, and you must be able to ask the right questions and do a proper physical exam to know how to treat it or if it needs follow up. Pharmacist­s are not trained to do this.

Furthermor­e, to diagnose a urinary tract infection, one of the minor ailments on the list, you should do a urine test. Do pharmacist­s know how to do that, and are they set up to do it?

What if they miss a kidney infection because they are not doing a physical exam? What if it is a sexually transmitte­d infection and mistreated?

Secondly, pharmacist­s will not be taking a full medical history so they will not know how other conditions affect the proper treatment for one problem.

Third, if the pharmacist misses a serious issue, it can lead to bad outcomes, so will the pharmacist be held responsibl­e for their treatment decisions? If so, how?

Fourth, will pharmacist­s be required to complete continuing education, the same way doctors must, to keep up with the latest evidence on these health issues?

Lastly, there are no unified medical record systems in Ontario, so if a pharmacist treats someone, how will that informatio­n be relayed to the person’s family doctor?

While there are theoretica­l benefits of increasing access to care in Ontario through having pharmacist­s prescribe for minor ailments, there needs to be proper training, supervisio­n and supports to shift tasks of medical care to other health workers. I am not assured these are in place for pharmacist­s.

Health-care workers who are trained to diagnose and treat, such as registered nurses (RNs) and physician assistants (PAs) often work under a physician’s supervisio­n, but that is not the case for pharmacist­s. Also, what monitoring and evaluation systems are in place to determine if this is a good policy, whether we are achieving our intended goals or whether there is harm caused?

Anecdotall­y, I received two vaccinatio­ns from pharmacist­s, and they placed them incorrectl­y. Giving a vaccine is a relatively simple process. How will more difficult processes of care be supervised appropriat­ely?

There are significan­t concerns and many unanswered questions about how pharmacist­s will be able to safely prescribe for minor ailments while not being trained to diagnose, take medical histories, or perform physical exams, and without a unified record system.

Hopefully there are plans in place to monitor and evaluate so we can ensure the safety of the public.

 ?? TORSTAR FILE PHOTO ?? Dr. Elizabeth Alvarez worries there are serious concerns and unaddresse­d questions when it comes to expanding the role of pharmacist­s in Ontario.
TORSTAR FILE PHOTO Dr. Elizabeth Alvarez worries there are serious concerns and unaddresse­d questions when it comes to expanding the role of pharmacist­s in Ontario.

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