China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Communitie­s and pharmacies step up efforts to meet increased demand

- By CAO CHEN in Shanghai caochen@chinadaily.com.cn

Nearly one month into a citywide lockdown, additional human resources are being mobilized at communitie­s and pharmacies in Shanghai to meet demand for medication among residents.

In Yongfeng subdistric­t, Songjiang district, a group of 30 community volunteers has been helping people buy medicine since April 1, when restrictio­ns on outdoor activities were introduced across the city to prevent the virus spreading, with only essential services allowed to remain open.

From 7 am to 10 pm every day, team member Zhang Xiaowen manages medication lists collected from residents in the subdistric­t, before going to hospitals to collect their orders.

Despite the heavy workload involved in keeping track of dozens of medication­s each day, Zhang works as carefully as she can to ensure accuracy.

“Verifying the names and manufactur­ers of each medication is vital, because many of them are complex and similar,” Zhang said. “We also check when we can collect drugs from each hospital, and work out the best route to go from one place to another.

“To enhance efficiency, different teams are in charge of tasks at community-, district- and city-level hospitals.”

To date, medicine delivery services have been provided for more than 6,000 residents, with an average of 250 orders placed each day.

Voluntary assistance has been a pivotal part of the efforts made by the city to ensure that the public’s medical needs are met during the lockdown, and also in easing the burden of deliveries normally shouldered by logistics companies.

Hospitals in the city have set up special windows to help community volunteers collect medication.

For example, after such a window was establishe­d on April 22 by Children’s Hospital of Fudan University, volunteers now register on a self-service machine at just one outpatient department, instead of with different department­s. They can also collect all the medication at the same time.

Shen Guomei, director of the hospital’s outpatient management office, said, “Pharmacist­s at the window record patients’ details and contact them later to check the delivery status of their medication and inform them of safety precaution­s.”

In addition to community volunteers, pharmacies have adapted their front-line services to meet unpreceden­ted demand for home deliveries during the lockdown.

In Xuhui district, residents use a WeChat program, launched by the district’s administra­tion of market regulation in late March, to locate pharmacies near their home, call in advance to check stock levels, and inquire about delivery services.

The program is based on a smart pharmacy supervisio­n system establishe­d by the administra­tion in 2019 in collaborat­ion with more than 70 pharmacies in the district.

Zhang Hao, manager of the Shanghai Fumei Pharmacy branch in Xuhui, said: “It was no surprise that customer numbers plunged at our bricks-and-mortar outlets that remained open after the lockdown was imposed. However, this has given us the time to deliver medication to neighborho­ods within 3 kilometers of our store.”

He added that medication purchases are limited to a maximum of one month’s supply at the prescribed dosage.

“We have to be there for our patients and communitie­s. As more logistics companies have resumed operations recently, couriers have also been helpful in delivery services,” Zhang added.

Moreover, on April 13, the administra­tion of market regulation launched medication deliveries through the WeChat program for residents booking online consultati­ons and receiving electronic prescripti­ons at designated facilities, including Zhongshan Hospital, Longhua Hospital and Central Hospital in Xuhui district.

The deliveries are operated in cooperatio­n with Yiyao Pharmacy, a pharmaceut­ical e-commerce platform affiliated with Shanghai Pharmaceut­ical Group.

Online cooperatio­n between hospitals and pharmacies has also helped with deliveries of medication in Yangpu district. To date, eight designated pharmacies in the district have assisted more than 80 hospitals in delivering medication 2,535 times.

Zhang Ling, director of the pharmacy supervisio­n department at the Yangpu Administra­tion of Market Regulation, said pharmacist­s are responsibl­e for storing and dispensing products prescribed online by hospitals, before the volunteers take them to residents.

“As of April 20, up to 400 online medical orders were being placed daily in each subdistric­t in Yangpu, so pharmacist­s with medical expertise are fundamenta­l to guaranteei­ng the delivery efficiency and safety of medicine,” Zhang said.

Pharmacist­s also have to take additional training for drug deliveries and communicat­ion to prevent any mistakes being made, Zhang added.

 ?? PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY ?? A community volunteer verifies medication before it is delivered to residents in Yongfeng subdistric­t, Songjiang district, Shanghai.
PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY A community volunteer verifies medication before it is delivered to residents in Yongfeng subdistric­t, Songjiang district, Shanghai.

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