Review of position statements on antimicrobial resistance and stewardship from professional pharmacy organisations
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Date
Authors
Lim, Kathryn
Olsen, Anna
Broom, Alex
Seale, Holly
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Elsevier BV
Abstract
Introduction
Pharmacists play a key role in tackling the global public health threat of antimicrobial resistance (AMR) through contributing to antimicrobial stewardship (AMS) practices. Professional pharmacy organisations describe this AMS role in position statements. Understanding how this role is described, including the why and potential impact is a first step to understanding how this issue is described to the profession, and framed in advocacy.
Objective
To examine how pharmacy's role in optimising antimicrobial use is articulated in pharmacy professional organisations' position statements.
Methods
Publicly available AMR position statements were sourced between February 2021 and May 2021 from the available websites of all International Pharmaceutical Federation (FIP) member organisations, supplemented by a general engine search. Descriptive analysis was conducted with a focus on four key themes of interest: 1) rationale for pharmacists' involvement in AMS) 2) characterisation of pharmacists' AMS role; 3) perceived impact of pharmacists’ involvement in AMS; and 4) perceived enablers and/or barriers to AMS involvement.
Results
17 position statements were sourced and analysed. Professional pharmacy organisations appear to focus on characterising pharmacists as advisors and educators as their primary role in AMS, with this function supported by their medication knowledge and accessibility as a health service. Specific settings, such as hospital or community pharmacy, were often highlighted in the documents, and were associated with the framing of the capacity and nature of pharmacists’ involvement in AMS. However, the limitations of pharmacists and their positions were not discussed.
Conclusions
There is an opportunity for future research to explore the concordance between the expectation of pharmacists’ involvement in AMS as outlined in these position statements, with the reality of their involvement. This is of importance in the primary care setting, as a key access point to antimicrobials globally
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Research in Social and Administrative Pharmacy
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Restricted until
2099-12-31
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