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Breaking Barriers in Pharmacy-Based Asthma Care: Challenges and Pathways to Effective Asthma Management


Article Information

Title: Breaking Barriers in Pharmacy-Based Asthma Care: Challenges and Pathways to Effective Asthma Management

Authors: Anza Ahmad, Sana Muzaffar, Azzah Khadim Hussain, Faziyya Latif, Quratulain Shoaib, Zartasha Gull, Saif Ullah Khan, Ahmad Ibne Yousaf, Ayesha Bint Yousaf

Journal: Indus Journal of Bioscience Research (IJBR)

HEC Recognition History
Category From To
Y 2024-10-01 2025-12-31

Publisher: Indus Education and Research Network

Country: Pakistan

Year: 2025

Volume: 3

Issue: 6

Language: en

DOI: 10.70749/ijbr.v3i6.1542

Keywords: Respiratory healthHealthcare BarriersPatient EmpowermentAsthma ManagementPharmacy-Based Care

Categories

Abstract

Introduction: Asthma, chronic respiratory disease affecting many people worldwide and remains public healthcare concern. Many scientific developments over the last 20 years have enhanced our knowledge of asthma and our capacity to successfully cope with and regulate it Since therapy and accurate medication consumption can decrease signs of asthma and disease development, recent recommendations emphasize the need to educate patients to how to manage their own conditions. Objectives: To study the barriers in asthma management and gathering the data regarding percentage of pharmacists managing asthma patients. Pharmacists are chosen voluntarily. Method: We surveyed 234 pharmacists currently working in community and hospital pharmacies in Lahore. The study outcome was self-reported that pharmacists have enough confidence, skills and time to asthma counseling and monitoring. Potential barriers included that the patients do not have enough time about empathetic discussions and counseling and providers do not receive incentives for counseling. Result: Most pharmacists reported that they have enough time for counseling (41%) and have enough confidence and skills in asthma monitoring (45%) and check patients inhalation techniques (41%) but patients’ point of view is that counseling is not pharmacist's job and don't agree on empathetic discussion with pharmacist (36%). Conclusion: Pharmacists are skilled and active in asthma management, improving patient self-care and adherence to guidelines. However, challenges include patient reluctance and pharmacists' lack of incentives and support for further education.


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