Diabetes handbook for pharmacists

8 December 2021

The role that pharmacists can play in preventing the projected rise in diabetes is highlighted in a new resource by the International Pharmaceutical Federations (FIP).

Diabetes prevention, screening and management: A handbook for pharmacists provides information on the wide range of pharmaceutical services that pharmacists can provide to reduce the global burden of this disease.

Chair of the FIP Board of Pharmaceutical Practice Paul Sinclair said it was imperative to ensure the healthcare workforce was prepared to care for people with diabetes and those at risk. In 2019.

“More than half of the 463 million adults with diabetes [worldwide] were not aware they had it,” he said.

“While pharmacists are primarily trained to address health concerns through pharmacological means, they also have the necessary skills and knowledge to provide prevention and screening services.

“By leveraging their accessibility and the trust the public has in them, pharmacists can promote the importance of following a healthy lifestyle, including consuming a healthy diet and participating in regular physical activity — particularly important measures to prevent the development of type 2 diabetes, which accounts for 90 to 95% of cases.

“This new FIP publication is part of the federation’s new Practice Transformation Programme on Non-Communicable Diseases.”

In addition to prevention, screening and referral, the FIP handbook covers medicines management, non-pharmacological management and advice, and prevention and management of complications such as diabetic neuropathy and retinopathy.

It also addresses barriers to providing diabetes services.

President of the International Diabetes Federation Professor Andrew Boulton said: “You need only spend a few minutes at your local pharmacy to appreciate the significant role the community pharmacist plays in supporting community health.

“Pharmacists are active members of the healthcare team, providing trusted advice into a community to which, more often than not, they also belong. From a diabetes care perspective, it is a key role,” “Advice, of course, should be based on the best available evidence. This publication from the International Pharmaceutical Federation provides pharmacists with everything they need to know to help guide community members to make healthy choices and adopt healthy habits.”

Diabetes prevention, screening and management: A handbook for pharmacists.

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Page last updated on: 08 December 2021