More than just experts on medications

UNMC Pharmacy Students to Offer Free Glucose, Cholesterol

Screenings to Promote Increasing Role of Pharmacists in Nations Health

Americans spend more than $75 billion per year on prescription and nonprescription

drugs, according to the American Pharmaceutical Association. Pharmacists

estimate that of the 1.6 billion prescriptions written every year, half

are taken incorrectly. Among the elderly, who take many more medications,

about 55 percent are taken incorrectly.

Some people believe that if one dose is good, two must be better, and

they take too much. Others take daily medicines only when symptoms occur,

while some take “drug holidays”– two- to four-day interruptions in their

medications — without considering the risk of consequences.

University of Nebraska Medical Center pharmacy students will celebrate

National Pharmacy Week Oct. 22-28, to promote the role of pharmacists in

the nations health and encourage people to take charge in preventing all-too-common

medication errors. The UNMC American Pharmaceutical Association Academy

of Students of Pharmacy is sponsoring a free public activity as well as

student events on-campus.

On Friday, Oct. 27, from 3:30 to 7 p.m., students will hold free glucose

and cholesterol screenings at Bakers Supermarket at 156th & Dodge

Streets. They also will have information available about the role pharmacists

play in disease prevention and management. People can also ask questions

about their medications.

The students also will be available to answer questions on how to store

medications safely, what questions to ask pharmacists and which non-prescription

medicines should not be taken with prescription medication.

Pharmacists are an important resource for preventive care and managing

health problems like diabetes and high cholesterol, said Sara Burda, UNMC

pharmacy student. Pharmacists help eliminate unnecessary costs by improving

medicine use. Improper use of prescription medicines, due to lack of knowledge,

costs the economy an estimated $20-100 billion per year.

 

Pharmacists now are playing a more collaborative role with physicians

in deciding how best to treat patients. Pharmacies also are expanding their

roles within the health care delivery system from a profession focusing

on preparation and dispensing of medications to one that promotes a range

of patient-oriented services to maximize the medicines effectiveness.

Some of the advice the future pharmacists want to give people is: take

the time to ask the pharmacist about medications, take medications as directed

and throw out old medications. With more drive-through pharmacies emerging,

pharmacists are under more pressure to count and dispense medications faster,

say students, and the chance for medications errors increases.

The service is convenient, said Niki Frates, UNMC pharmacy student,

but like at any pharmacy, medication errors can occur, so its another

reason people need to check their medications and ask questions.

The American Pharmaceutical Association estimates that U.S. businesses

lose 20 million workdays per year due to incorrect use of medicines prescribed

for heart and circulatory diseases alone. The failure to have prescriptions

dispensed and/or renewed has resulted in an estimated cost of $8.5 billion

for increased hospital admissions and physician visits — nearly one percent

of the country’s total health care expenditures.

In addition, in the past 10 years, the status of 34 medications has

gone from prescription to non-prescription or over-the-counter. A national

poll shows people dont always treat over-the-counter pain relievers as

serious medicines as one-half do not always read product labels, according

to the association.

For information about avoiding medication errors, ask a pharmacist or

see the American Pharmaceutical Associations web site at www.pharmacyandyou.org.