World No Tobacco Day: FIP, WHO canvass more pharmacists’ involvement in tobacco cessation

0
106
pharmacy

 

The International Pharmaceutical Federation (FIP) and the World Health Organisation (WHO) are urging national tobacco control programmes and pharmacy associations to develop and implement plans to engage more pharmacists in advancing tobacco cessation.

In a joint statement, issued by the two organisations today — on World No Tobacco Day 2024, and sent to pharmanewsonline, they described a number of ways in which tobacco control programmes and pharmacy associations can work together towards this goal.

These include, but not limited to: providing joint leadership in developing policy guidance and resource mobilisation, undertaking training of pharmacists to enable effective delivery of tobacco cessation services, promoting rational use of proven over-the-counter and prescription tobacco cessation medicines.

According to the FIP President, Mr Paul Sinclair, “This statement builds on our federation’s previous collaboration with the WHO on engaging pharmacists in tobacco cessation, including in the development of tobacco cessation tools. It highlights the important role of pharmacists in preventing the harms of tobacco use and nicotine dependence. FIP and the WHO are committed to strengthening joint efforts against tobacco use.”

READ
COVID-19: We Are Fully in the Phase of Personal Responsibility- Sanwo-Olu

Dr Vinayak Prasad, head of the No Tobacco Unit at the WHO, while responding to the urgent need to help the over 1.25 billion global tobacco users quit all nicotine and tobacco products, said the statement calls for a collaborative effort among healthcare professionals.

“Specifically, it advocates for national action to empower all pharmacists to routinely provide tobacco cessation support. If every pharmacist identifies and advises just one tobacco user to quit each day, this collective action could reach over 4 million users in a single day”, he added.

The statement also announced the publication of the latest global intelligence from FIP on pharmacist-led tobacco cessation services on Friday. The FIP report presents the findings of a literature review and a survey of FIP member organisations in 78 countries, shedding light on service availability, scope, funding mechanisms, remuneration models and regulatory frameworks.

READ
HIV Vaccine Trial Fails Again, Scientist Reveals

The report reveals that tobacco cessation pharmacy services were found in over 65% (51) of the countries and ranged from initiating tobacco-cessation discussions to prescribing nicotine replacement therapy and other medicines. Legislation to expand pharmacists’ prescribing authority to include tobacco cessation medicines would increase uptake of tobacco cessation services by removing the need to obtain a prescription from a medical doctor for the pharmacotherapy to be covered by insurance services, the authors say.

Mr Gonçalo Sousa Pinto, FIP lead for practice transformation and editor of the report, citing the WHO statistics said, “Around 80 per cent of the 1.25 billion tobacco users around the world live in low-and middle-income countries where the burden of tobacco-related disease and death is heaviest. We need advocacy and targeted interventions to ensure equitable access to tobacco cessation services and products across all income levels,” Mr Sousa Pinto said.

READ
DR Congo to Launch Second Ebola Vaccine in November

Also of the 51 countries where pharmacist-led tobacco cessation services are available, he observed that 68 per cent (35) reported that pharmacies do not receive remuneration for any of these services. Where remuneration exists, models include direct payment by the patient or customer, reimbursement by public health systems, and reimbursement from private health insurance companies.

Best practices from 36 countries and the tools used by pharmacists to enhance their service delivery are shared in the report. “We found that tobacco cessation interventions provided by pharmacists are strongly correlated with health outcomes, economic savings, increased health system efficiency and reduced burden on other healthcare sectors,” said Sousa Pinto,

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here