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I’m not I agree. The first reason is that many medications carry significant risks. For instance you mention insulin. For someone already prescribed insulin, yes it should be easy to access in case they should be able to get more (and that is the purpose of a repeat prescription). However, to provide insulin over the counter to someone never previously prescribed it could be incredibly dangerous, and indeed fatal. This is Similarly true for some cardiac medication. Second, i think such a system makes pharmacists de facto community doctors, but without the time, training, or patient medical data to function correctly. Community doctors can make better decisions when they see the same patient multiple times, and have access to blood pressure readings, a list of other medical conditions etc. Buying over the counter makes a lot of this difficult and inefficient. Third, I think it leads to a risk of encouraging patients to manage conditions without valid medical advice. For instance, depression is often treated best with psychotherapy. By buying antidepressives OTC, it prevents patients getting the holistic care needed. Similarly, patients may follow quack medical advice and do themselves significant injury by taking medications not needed (in the short term or long term). Ultimately doctors offer a lot of value more than just prescribing medication, and often medicines need oversight to ensure the benefits outweigh the risk. |
Yes, medications carry risk. But, "without a doctor's prescription" does not mean randomly. People still take advice from doctors and pharmacists, they just aren't required to have proof that a doctor has decided something. In any case, a pharmacist is a pharmacology specialist and probably more knowledgable about drug risk and safety than anyone.
>> makes pharmacists de facto community doctors.
Again, depends on the ideal you are comparing to. You are implying an ideal community doctoring setup, where a local doctor knows people and is accessible to them. An ideal that exists for maybe 1%-2% of the world. The problem that pharmacist/nurse led care solves is that this ideal does not exist. GPs are inaccessible, cost $75 for 10 minutes or don't have appointments available. A pharmacist probably sees someone every time they're sick. Doctors... only if it's bad.
I feel like this sort of issue comes up often, when discussing primary medicine. The comparison isn't fair. When listing the pros and cons of pharmacist or nurse led care, we get a laundry list of real life issues. When listing pros and cons of doctor led care, we get an idealisation. IRL, most GPs prescribing antidepressives do exactly as much "holistic care" as pharmacists would. Patient asks for ADs. Doctor spends 2-3 minutes going through a checklist. Done. Whether or not that's ideal has little to do with who writes the script.