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Evidence-based pharmacy

To provide the best possible pharmaceutical care, pharmacy practice must shift from perception to evidence. In most contexts, including the ...



To provide the best possible pharmaceutical care, pharmacy practice must shift from perception to evidence. In most contexts, including the pharmacy, the introduction and implementation of clinical guidelines into everyday practice face a significant barrier as a result of the idea of evidence for clinical decision making, which gained awareness in the early 1990s.

With so many new specializations and subspecialties emerging in the field of medical science, keeping up with the most recent advancements is one of the problems. Making all practical judgments based on research studies that are chosen in accordance with the precise requirements relevant to quantitative, qualitative, and theoretical studies is the fundamental tenet of evidence-based practice.

Evidence-based medicine is seen as being challenging to practice, and one approach is to fill in the practitioners' knowledge gaps by improving information systems to offer decision assistance, which will aid in reducing judgment mistakes. A curriculum that is attentive to the development of skills in the field of evidence-based pharmacy must be created.


Refernces

  1. Stone, L. (1998). Good pharmacy practice in developing countries: recommendations for step-wise implementation. In FIP Congress Report, Hague.
  2. TOKLU, H., Akici, A., Oktay, Åž., Sanda, C. A. L. İ., SEZEN, S., & Uysal, M. K. (2010). The pharmacy practice of community pharmacists in Turkey. Marmara Pharmaceutical Journal14(1), 53-60.
  3. Hjørland, B. (2011). Evidence‐based practice: An analysis based on the philosophy of science. Journal of the american society for information science and technology62(7), 1301-1310.


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