Home » YOUR LOCAL PHARMACIST–WILL BE YOUR JUNIOR DOCTOR

YOUR LOCAL PHARMACIST–WILL BE YOUR JUNIOR DOCTOR

Professor Crown with PharmD students

Professor Crown with PharmD students in a second year physical assessment and injections course where students learn to assess patient symptoms and interpret physical findings.

The recent news that the Ontario government has approved regulatory amendments to enable pharmacists, students, and interns in our province to assess and prescribe for 12 minor ailments is a welcome milestone for our profession. The Ontario Pharmacists Association, Ontario College Pharmacists and many advocates across the profession have worked diligently towards achieving this expanded scope of practice, underscoring the skills and contributions of pharmacists to providing high quality and timely patient care.

The Doctor of Pharmacy program at the Leslie Dan Faculty of Pharmacy prepares future pharmacists to deliver full scope pharmacy care and it is exciting to look toward our students being able to maximize their knowledge and skills to engage in minor ailments prescribing and contribute to increasing access to care in their communities.

Our current PharmD students are well positioned to be at the forefront in supporting pharmacists through roll out and implementation of these new services. Our faculty have been working for many years building subject matter and clinical expertise that is woven across our program in core and elective courses. Minor ailments are covered in our pharmacotherapy series of courses, including a Year 2 course dedicated to Self Care Perspectives, and Year 3 elective. Students have opportunities to practice their assessment and communication skills through simulations in our Medication Therapy Management series of courses.

Our second-year course on patient and physical assessment is another opportunity where students learn and practice skills to gather a patient history, engage in a comprehensive assessment to effectively prescribe and follow up on therapy for several different conditions, including minor ailments.

Additionally, over the next few months we will embark on work to refresh our existing content to ensure that assessment and prescribing skills are mapped and assessed across our program. Upon completion of Year 2, students will have acquired the knowledge and skills needed to be actively engaged in minor ailment prescribing and contribute to these services under the supervision of a preceptor.

I look forward to partnering with our preceptor community to help this curriculum come alive in our early experience and advanced practice rotations and to supporting our students as they help Ontarians achieve optimal health outcomes through expanded pharmacy practice.

Natalie Crown is an Assistant Professor (Teaching Stream) and the Director of the Doctor of Pharmacy (PharmD) program at the Leslie Dan Faculty of Pharmacy.

 Murray Rubin B Sc Phm graduated in Pharmacy in 1954. Thats me.  My business partner was Mervin Kerzner. We split his salary as he was a salesperson for Eli Lilly. I remember so well our professors telling us to be careful when we recommend certain products because we could be charged with practising medicine. Oh, how the world has changed. Because of the number of old people around, and the number of pharmaceuticals they use, the Ontario Government is giving your local pharmacist and his profession this additional power .It is about time. In the 1960s we were instructed to point out two or three items and let the customer make the choice. This is to avoid being charged for practising medicine. Now we are like junior doctors .Its not that they love us, they need us . They save money using our skills. Without question we are paid far less than the family doctor for the same job. With a certain amount of additional training, under described regulated conditions and for certain illnesses we are now able to recommend pharmaceutical products,and do other minor procedures to save our province money, big money!These were my ideas in the early 1960`s. But It took the fact that millions of senior citizens came into the picture  needing servicethat the Ontario government finally woke up to our unused skills   HAL-LE- LU-JAH. Pharmacists now are allowed to make injections. As well my pharmacy called Vanguard Pharmacy was the first to actively promote generic drugs and mailed our prescriptions province- wide.

Name of author

Name: Murray Rubin

Short Bio: I was born in Toronto in 1931 to a wonderful mother who divorced shortly before my birth. I owe a great deal of my success to her. I am Jewish but not at all religious, yet my culture plays an important part of my personality. I attended Harbord Collegiate and U. of T. Faculty of Pharmacy. A unique mail-order pharmacy was the first of my endeavours in the profession, followed by many stores throughout Ontario. I have a loving wife, 3 children and grand-children and I am now retired from pharmacy. But what do I write about? Everything! My topics are funny, serious, whimsical, timely, outrageous, inspiring, and inventive. I promise that if you take the time to read any one of these topics – you will not be sorry.

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