Drug Topics - November 10, 2008 - (Page 56) VIEWPOINT tions used by individual consumers. Reach out to those personal trainers advertising in your community and offer to be an information resource on the safe use of adjunct overthe-counter (OTC) medications and supplements used in their programs. As a pharmacist, you are an integral part of your community’s health and wellness. While trainers are coaching on approaches to exercise and other external methods applied to the body, you should take your rightful place as the best coach for what goes into the body. Build relationships with trainers and coaches, learn what they recommend to win referrals. Ask to set up consultation appointments — and of course, charge a fee for your expertise (in keeping, of course, with your employer’s business policies). Pharmacists’ knowledge and licensure surpass the knowledge of the 18-year-old, parttime associate who works at the general vitamin store and makes product recommendations without asking all the right questions. To promote the safe use of dietary supplements, you can offer fliers on common herb-disease, herb-drug interactions. Check whether your computerized dispensing system has an herbal drug-screening capability for duplicate therapy, drug interactions, and drug allergy interactions. Try to maintain a profile of these OTC products as your clients, old and new, and purchase them. As a stakeholder to good pharmaceutical practice, keep on top of the latest medication-error and side-effect information available from such sources as the Institute of Safe Medication Practices (ISM) and the USP-ISMP Medication Error Reporting Program. Enroll in the U.S. Food and Drug Administration’s listserve to receive automatic e-mail alerts on product recalls, cautions, and adverse drug reaction information gleaned from the MedWatch program. Become a grassroots stakeholder in medication safety and participate in the reporting process for OTC adverse drug interactions. While the pharmacist is often the last healthcare professional sick patients see before they take their medications home in hopes of healing and feeling better, you should be the first person consumers want to see when they purchase OTC wellness products. Most of the time, pharmacists are called to fill and monitor prescriptions after patients have experienced a negative outcome. We should take advantage of an opportunity to support our patients as they seek to avoid them. We can help them stay well and thrive. NANCY L. LOSBEN is chief quality officer at Omnicare Inc. W W W.D R U GTO P I C S .C O M Let’s get physical Pharmacists urged to take on larger training role Nancy L. Losben, RPh, CCP, FASCP, CG A recent trend in wellness, health, and beauty is personal trainers. Oprah has one. So do many people seeking healthy lifestyles. Their services range from lifestyle coaching to body building. Personal trainers are dedicated to helping clients achieve and maintain positive life changes advertised in newspapers and periodicals, at the gym, and on the Web. While many personal trainers are licensed healthcare professionals or rehabilitation therapists, others are phys ed baccalaureates or personnel trained by the local chain fitness center. I don’t think fitness is a bad idea, but adding dietary supplements and herbs like Hoodia, used to control appetite, without checking with one’s pharmacist — that’s a bad idea. Pharmacists should engage these trainers and collaborate with them. They recommend the vitamins, minerals, herbs, and dietary supplements to be added their clients’ routines. The question is whether pharmacists can identify and unveil opportunities to become involved in these programs while creating a complementary service to provide medication safety to our wellness-seeking clients and customers. The drug-drug, drug-herb, drug-nutritional formula, drug-vitamin, and drug-disease interactions with oral dietary supplements are often serious. They provide excellent reasons for pharmacists to become part of clients’ fitness teams. Start by ensuring reputable products from reputable manufacturers. Become familiar with the health products sitting on your shelves. Learn what they claim to accomplish or enhance, whether there is any clinical evidence of their effectiveness, appropriate dosing parameters (especially for teens and seniors), common side effects, and interactions with other supplements or (most important) with prescription medica- 56 DRUG TOPICS N OV. 10, 2008 GETTY IMAGES / UPPERCUT IMAGES http://WWW.DRUGTOPICS.COM
Table of Contents Feed for the Digital Edition of Drug Topics - November 10, 2008 Drug Topics - November 10, 2008 Contents Up Front Up Front in Depth Letters Rx Care Government Community Practice First Responders Clinical Practice Self-Care FDA Safety Page Weighing the Complications of Obesity New Products Viewpoint Drug Topics - November 10, 2008 Drug Topics - November 10, 2008 - Drug Topics - November 10, 2008 (Page Cover1) Drug Topics - November 10, 2008 - Drug Topics - November 10, 2008 (Page Cover2) Drug Topics - November 10, 2008 - Drug Topics - November 10, 2008 (Page 1) Drug Topics - November 10, 2008 - Contents (Page 2) Drug Topics - November 10, 2008 - Contents (Page 3) Drug Topics - November 10, 2008 - Contents (Page 4) Drug Topics - November 10, 2008 - Contents (Page 5) Drug Topics - November 10, 2008 - Contents (Page 6) Drug Topics - November 10, 2008 - Contents (Page 7) Drug Topics - November 10, 2008 - Up Front (Page 8) Drug Topics - November 10, 2008 - Up Front (Page 9) Drug Topics - November 10, 2008 - Up Front (Page 10) Drug Topics - November 10, 2008 - Up Front (Page 11) Drug Topics - November 10, 2008 - Up Front in Depth (Page 12) Drug Topics - November 10, 2008 - Letters (Page 13) Drug Topics - November 10, 2008 - Rx Care (Page 14) Drug Topics - November 10, 2008 - Rx Care (Page 15) Drug Topics - November 10, 2008 - Rx Care (Page 16) Drug Topics - November 10, 2008 - Rx Care (Page 17) Drug Topics - November 10, 2008 - Government (Page 18) Drug Topics - November 10, 2008 - Government (Page 19) Drug Topics - November 10, 2008 - Government (Page 20) Drug Topics - November 10, 2008 - Community Practice (Page 21) Drug Topics - November 10, 2008 - First Responders (Page 22) Drug Topics - November 10, 2008 - First Responders (Page 23) Drug Topics - November 10, 2008 - First Responders (Page 24) Drug Topics - November 10, 2008 - First Responders (Page 25) Drug Topics - November 10, 2008 - First Responders (Page 26) Drug Topics - November 10, 2008 - First Responders (Page 27) Drug Topics - November 10, 2008 - First Responders (Page 28) Drug Topics - November 10, 2008 - First Responders (Page 29) Drug Topics - November 10, 2008 - First Responders (Page 30) Drug Topics - November 10, 2008 - First Responders (Page 31) Drug Topics - November 10, 2008 - Clinical Practice (Page 32) Drug Topics - November 10, 2008 - Clinical Practice (Page 33) Drug Topics - November 10, 2008 - Clinical Practice (Page 34) Drug Topics - November 10, 2008 - Clinical Practice (Page 35) Drug Topics - November 10, 2008 - Self-Care (Page 36) Drug Topics - November 10, 2008 - Self-Care (Page 37) Drug Topics - November 10, 2008 - Self-Care (Page 38) Drug Topics - November 10, 2008 - FDA Safety Page (Page 39) Drug Topics - November 10, 2008 - Weighing the Complications of Obesity (Page 40) Drug Topics - November 10, 2008 - Weighing the Complications of Obesity (Page 41) Drug Topics - November 10, 2008 - Weighing the Complications of Obesity (Page 42) Drug Topics - November 10, 2008 - Weighing the Complications of Obesity (Page 43) Drug Topics - November 10, 2008 - Weighing the Complications of Obesity (Page 44) Drug Topics - November 10, 2008 - Weighing the Complications of Obesity (Page 45) Drug Topics - November 10, 2008 - Weighing the Complications of Obesity (Page 46) Drug Topics - November 10, 2008 - Weighing the Complications of Obesity (Page 47) Drug Topics - November 10, 2008 - Weighing the Complications of Obesity (Page 48) Drug Topics - November 10, 2008 - Weighing the Complications of Obesity (Page 49) Drug Topics - November 10, 2008 - New Products (Page 50) Drug Topics - November 10, 2008 - New Products (Page 51) Drug Topics - November 10, 2008 - New Products (Page 52) Drug Topics - November 10, 2008 - New Products (Page 53) Drug Topics - November 10, 2008 - New Products (Page 54) Drug Topics - November 10, 2008 - New Products (Page 55) Drug Topics - November 10, 2008 - Viewpoint (Page 56) Drug Topics - November 10, 2008 - Viewpoint (Page 57) Drug Topics - November 10, 2008 - Viewpoint (Page 58) Drug Topics - November 10, 2008 - Viewpoint (Page 59) Drug Topics - November 10, 2008 - Viewpoint (Page 60) Drug Topics - November 10, 2008 - Viewpoint (Page 61) Drug Topics - November 10, 2008 - Viewpoint (Page 62) Drug Topics - November 10, 2008 - Viewpoint (Page 63) Drug Topics - November 10, 2008 - Viewpoint (Page 64) Drug Topics - November 10, 2008 - Viewpoint (Page 65) Drug Topics - November 10, 2008 - Viewpoint (Page 66) Drug Topics - November 10, 2008 - Viewpoint (Page 67) Drug Topics - November 10, 2008 - Viewpoint (Page 68) Drug Topics - November 10, 2008 - Viewpoint (Page 69) Drug Topics - November 10, 2008 - Viewpoint (Page 70) Drug Topics - November 10, 2008 - Viewpoint (Page Cover3) Drug Topics - November 10, 2008 - Viewpoint (Page Cover4)
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