1. Pharmacist Workforce at Primary Care Clinics: A Nationwide Survey in Taiwan
- Author
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Li Fang Chou, Shinn Jang Hwang, Wei Ho Chen, Shu Chiung Chiang, Yuh Lih Chang, Pei Chen Lee, and Tzeng Ji Chen
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Leadership and Management ,education ,pharmacists ,Specialty ,Taiwan ,Health Informatics ,Pharmacy ,Primary care ,Nationwide survey ,030226 pharmacology & pharmacy ,Article ,health workforce ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Health Information Management ,medicine ,030212 general & internal medicine ,health care economics and organizations ,Government ,business.industry ,Health Policy ,ambulatory care facilities ,Pharmacist workforce ,Pharmaceutical care ,Family medicine ,Scale (social sciences) ,Medicine ,business - Abstract
Although dispensing is usually separated from prescribing in healthcare service delivery worldwide, primary care clinics in some countries can hire pharmacists to offer in-house dispensing or point-of-care dispensing for patients’ convenience. This study aimed to provide a general overview of pharmacists working at primary care clinics in Taiwan. Special attention was paid to clarifying the relationship by location, scale, and specialty of clinics. The data source was the Government’s open database in Taiwan. In our study, a total of 8688 pharmacists were hired in 6020 (52.1%) 11,546 clinics. The result revealed significant differences in the number of pharmacists at different specialty clinics among levels of urbanization. Group practices did not have a higher probability of hiring pharmacists than solo practices. There was a higher prevalence of pharmacists practicing in clinics of non surgery-related specialties than in surgery-related specialties. Although the strict separation policy of dispensing and prescribing has been implemented for 2 decades in Taiwan, most primary care clinics seem to circumvent the regulation by hiring pharmacists to maintain dominant roles in dispensing drugs and retaining the financial benefits from drugs. More in-depth analyses are required to study the impact on pharmacies and the quality of pharmaceutical care.
- Published
- 2021
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