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W hile medication safety and preventive adverse drug event strategies have been more prominently reported in the medical literature over the last decade, the pharmacist's role in improving the safety of medication use has been a part of the pharmacy literature since the 1960s. The inaugural issue of The Annals of Pharmacotherapy was published in January 1967 as Drug Intelligence, and over the years the journal has undergone a few more name changes. The Annals of Pharmacotherapy was started by a dedicated group of pharmacists as an independent journal of hospital pharmacy to highlight best practices for US and foreign pharmacists. 1 According to Don Francke's editorial, one of the objectives of Drug Intelligence was to encourage hospital pharmacists to "relate more directly to the patient, the physician, and the nurse and to take his place on the health-care team as a practitioner of clinical phar-macy…." Many of the early issues of Drug Intelligence were focused on what the practice of "clinical pharmacy" should be and were a forum for discussion of the development of clinical pharmacy practice at many hospitals. 2-8 The education of pharmacists and pharmacy students to prepare them for "clinical pharmacist" roles was also discussed; these clinical pharmacy roles continue to evolve and have expanded from hospital practice to ambulatory and other settings.In another editorial, Don Francke described the multidisciplinary nature of medication errors. 9 He was very timely in identifying solutions for medication errors and improving medication safety. He emphasized that improved communication and automation of decision-making of the medication use process by physicians, pharmacists, and nurses, as well as cooperative interdisciplinary action, were key to providing better patient care and reducing medication errors, 9 or what we now term adverse drug events. Gloria Francke authored an early article on the definition of clinical pharmacy and listed the multidisciplinary process of medication error prevention as 1 of 5 factors influencing the development of clinical pharmacy practice. 3 Gloria Francke called for pharmacists to work more closely with nurses and physicians to improve provision and control of medications from the time of procurement to the time of administration to improve medication safety.Several articles and editorials in The Annals discussed the direction and roles that pharmacists should take in providing better patient care as practitioners of clinical pharmacy. Medication distribution in US hospitals in the 1960s now seems almost primitive, with pharmacists overseeing the distribution of drugs from the pharmacy to the patientcare units and nurses being responsible for stocking and preparation of medications, often with duplication of effort by pharmacists, physicians, and nurses, 7,8 compared with current distribution systems that use robotics, computers, and other technology to control the medication use process within the institution. Improved medication technology and control of the distribution p...
W hile medication safety and preventive adverse drug event strategies have been more prominently reported in the medical literature over the last decade, the pharmacist's role in improving the safety of medication use has been a part of the pharmacy literature since the 1960s. The inaugural issue of The Annals of Pharmacotherapy was published in January 1967 as Drug Intelligence, and over the years the journal has undergone a few more name changes. The Annals of Pharmacotherapy was started by a dedicated group of pharmacists as an independent journal of hospital pharmacy to highlight best practices for US and foreign pharmacists. 1 According to Don Francke's editorial, one of the objectives of Drug Intelligence was to encourage hospital pharmacists to "relate more directly to the patient, the physician, and the nurse and to take his place on the health-care team as a practitioner of clinical phar-macy…." Many of the early issues of Drug Intelligence were focused on what the practice of "clinical pharmacy" should be and were a forum for discussion of the development of clinical pharmacy practice at many hospitals. 2-8 The education of pharmacists and pharmacy students to prepare them for "clinical pharmacist" roles was also discussed; these clinical pharmacy roles continue to evolve and have expanded from hospital practice to ambulatory and other settings.In another editorial, Don Francke described the multidisciplinary nature of medication errors. 9 He was very timely in identifying solutions for medication errors and improving medication safety. He emphasized that improved communication and automation of decision-making of the medication use process by physicians, pharmacists, and nurses, as well as cooperative interdisciplinary action, were key to providing better patient care and reducing medication errors, 9 or what we now term adverse drug events. Gloria Francke authored an early article on the definition of clinical pharmacy and listed the multidisciplinary process of medication error prevention as 1 of 5 factors influencing the development of clinical pharmacy practice. 3 Gloria Francke called for pharmacists to work more closely with nurses and physicians to improve provision and control of medications from the time of procurement to the time of administration to improve medication safety.Several articles and editorials in The Annals discussed the direction and roles that pharmacists should take in providing better patient care as practitioners of clinical pharmacy. Medication distribution in US hospitals in the 1960s now seems almost primitive, with pharmacists overseeing the distribution of drugs from the pharmacy to the patientcare units and nurses being responsible for stocking and preparation of medications, often with duplication of effort by pharmacists, physicians, and nurses, 7,8 compared with current distribution systems that use robotics, computers, and other technology to control the medication use process within the institution. Improved medication technology and control of the distribution p...
A symposium attended by clinical faculty members and administrators from two colleges of pharmacy, practice-based clinical pharmacists and pharmacy managers from seven health care institutions, and representatives from three national pharmacy organizations was conducted to discuss the roles of and cooperation between academic- and practice-based pharmacy clinicians.
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